Well 99% of the divers I see in Mexico haven't even heard of DIR when I mention it.
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Boogie711:Eventually, people discovered that they wanted to do things that traditional training practices simply weren't adequate for. So they started to revise their system, and to their pleasant surprise, discovered
So they called this system "Doing it Right." And those who have never truly bothered to learn WHY it's better choose hear an unspoken follow up - "... so that means you're doing it wrong." And thusly, they react defensively.
netmage:I was wondering - why do so many feathers get ruffled when I mention "DIR" @ the dive shop/boat.....
...I don't mean to lauch a troll thread - but I'm wondering if peoples opinions on DIR and its approach are the same everywhere or they tend to follow regional trends and embraced accordingly...?
DA Aquamaster:Naming it "Doing it Good", "Doing it Better", "Doing it Different" or just plain leaving it as an offshoot, improvement, adaptation and/or extension of Hogarthian gear configuration and philosophy would have made it a lot less offensive and controversial.
DA Aquamaster:Boogie pretty much hit it on the nose. The choice to name it "Doing it Right" in my opinon, was a mistake because it naturally implies everything else is "Doing it Wrong".
GUE may not have intended it that way, but the fact is that most people frequently think and classify things in opposing pairs which is why many behavioral and psychological inventories are constructed that way. So it is natural for people to think that "Doing it Wrong" is the natual and inevitable opposite of "Doing it Right".
The second part of boogie's statement highlights the other issue with DIR - the often stated presumption that "Doing it Right" is "superior for all types of diving, for a number of reasons".
A LOT of people would (and do) argue with that because it is very subjective statement and the arguments supporting it are based on a presumed set of conditions and values that not everyone shares. It sounds like (and in fact is) a post modernistic view but what is "right" is frankly relative and in large part individually defined. The problem many people have with true DIR is that it is, for the most part, an all or nothing philosphy and leaves little to individual choice.
Naming it "Doing it Good", "Doing it Better", "Doing it Different" or just plain leaving it as an offshoot, improvement, adaptation and/or extension of Hogarthian gear configuration and philosophy would have made it a lot less offensive and controversial.
The opposite of inclusion isn't exclusion, its apathy.
DA Aquamaster:Boogie pretty much hit it on the nose. The choice to name it "Doing it Right" in my opinon, was a mistake because it naturally implies everything else is "Doing it Wrong".
...
The second part of boogie's statement highlights the other issue with DIR - the often stated presumption that "Doing it Right" is "superior for all types of diving, for a number of reasons".
A LOT of people would (and do) argue with that because it is very subjective statement and the arguments supporting it are based on a presumed set of conditions and values that not everyone shares. It sounds like (and in fact is) a post modernistic view but what is "right" is frankly relative and in
ba_hiker:....
He would not dive. Didn't have his gear. Didn't know any dive buddies. So he wouldn't go.