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‘It was a nightmare.’ Modesto couple, on a diving trip to Hawaii, experiences tragedy | Denton Daily
During the nearly three decades Kathy Monday has been a scuba diver, she’s heard of ‘nitrogen narcosis’ twice: the first time during her certification classes in 1991 and the second time in April, in the days following her husband’s deadly diving accident.
On the backside of Molokini — a crescent-shaped, partially submerged crater off of Maui — Jeff Sharp rapidly ascended from a great depth of 200 feet.
He was lifeless when he reached the surface.
Sharp’s behavior that preceded his death was likely the result of nitrogen narcosis, an alteration of consciousness brought on by breathing certain gases while diving, according It causes an anesthetic effect that can include dizziness, tunnel vision, poor judgment and hallucinations. It can cause feelings ranging from drunkenness and euphoria to hysteria and terror.
The trip to Maui was supposed to be a restful vacation for the busy couple.
Sharp and Monday met at Gervasoni’s restaurant and married in 2013. They both lived in Modesto from the time they were children. Monday is an attorney and owns the popular east Modesto breakfast restaurant Squeeze In. Sharp furnished offices.
Together they share five children and seven grandchildren.
Monday said that since Sharp’s death, she and her family are “living our lives with grace despite the gigantic hole Jeff’s absence has left in each of our lives and the piece of each of our hearts that shall always remain broken until we see him again.”
She said she was willing to share the terrifying story of her husband’s death because “it’s possible it may save a life.”
Through a series of interviews and emails with The Bee, this is the account Monday gave:
Sharp got certified to dive in 2012 and the couple had been to their favorite diving location off the Big Island of Hawaii multiple times, but it was their first trip to Maui.
They’d been there five days with one of Monday’s friends when on April 15 they went on the diving trip to Molokini.
There were four instructors on the boat. Two would stay aboard and the other two would each accompany a group of six to eight divers on the tour.
“While everyone was getting prepared … music was playing and the atmosphere was very upbeat, energetic and party-like,” Monday said.
John Legend’s “All of Me” was playing as Monday and Sharp held hands, looked at each other and said, “Here we go,” just before stepping off the boat into the ocean.
Monday and most of the other divers descended first, about 70 feet, while the instructor took Sharp and another diver down separately because they previously had had trouble clearing their ears.
When they were all together, Sharp was about eight feet from Monday and the group was about five feet off the crater’s wall.
They looked at each other and Monday motioned with her hands to ask Sharp if he was OK. He signaled back that he was.
In recreational diving, the buddy system is used to avoid or survive underwater emergencies. But before Monday and Sharp could “buddy up,” the instructor started banging two metal sticks together to get everyone’s attention, pointing to a group of sharks about 20 feet away.
The group turned in the direction of sharks and watched them for a minute or so.
“When we all turned around to get situated again and get in buddy format to begin the actual dive tour, Jeff was not there,” Monday said.
She looked around and up, thinking he might have had ear trouble and gone to clear his ears, but she didn’t see him.
Then she looked out in the opposite direction of the crater and spotted him swimming away “casually out into the open ocean in a downward direction.”
The instructor banged the metal sticks again and Monday waved her arms to get Sharp’s attention, but he didn’t turn around.
They both began swimming in his direction. The instructor stayed above him and continued banging the sticks.
Monday was trying to reach him; her intent was to grab his hair.
(continued in next post)