Eric Sedletzky
Contributor
When I first started diving and was going through all my classes I took a rescue class with a guy named Larry Cook.
We became really good friends and long time dive buddies. He was there when I launched and did my first dives off my home built boat.
We explored the Delgada trench together up in Humboldt County California, a deep scary dive into an abyss.
He was a strong diver, a type A personality (sometimes to his detriment).
Never the less he was my best buddy for years.
We had so many good dives I can't even remember them all.
We dove Monterey, we dove all over Sonoma County, Mendocino County, Channel Islands.
He had long term back problems though and as a result his diving suffered. He was on a lot of pain medication and slowly began into a downward spiral.
He ended up getting divorced from his wife who is a nurse. He left her not the other way around.
That made him even more reclusive.
I saw many symptoms of depression creeping into his life.
I would try and get him to go diving and do stuff to get his mind off it.
I would have him over for dinner and tried everything I knew to talk to him and turn him around, but to no avail.
He was his own worst enemy.
He went through a horrendous mid life crisis, the worst I've ever seen anybody have.
After a while he isolated himself and nobody could get a hold of him.
He stopped returning phone calls. I eventually drove by his house because I was worried and found out he sold it and split. There were new people living there.
A few weeks later I ran into a guy who worked for the same company that Larry did that he ended up selling everything he owned and moving back to Santa Cruz. I was told that he hooked up with a few of his old high school acid buddies from back in the 60's who were still living that life style and was going to live with them.
He said that Larry had completely gone off his rocker towards the end and finally just quit showing up to work.
All this was probably 5 years ago now.
I was in the dive shop last Wednesday getting fills and the owner had told me that Larry's ex wife had called and wanted them to tell me the next time they saw me that Larry had committed suicide.
So anyway, I'm trying to deal with it.
He even jokingly told me one time when we were on our way out to go diving that he had no retirement, he was just about junk at working (as an HVAC tech), and his exit strategy was to put a pill in his head.
We laughed it off then, but I guess he really meant it.
Take care buddy, I'll miss you.
We became really good friends and long time dive buddies. He was there when I launched and did my first dives off my home built boat.
We explored the Delgada trench together up in Humboldt County California, a deep scary dive into an abyss.
He was a strong diver, a type A personality (sometimes to his detriment).
Never the less he was my best buddy for years.
We had so many good dives I can't even remember them all.
We dove Monterey, we dove all over Sonoma County, Mendocino County, Channel Islands.
He had long term back problems though and as a result his diving suffered. He was on a lot of pain medication and slowly began into a downward spiral.
He ended up getting divorced from his wife who is a nurse. He left her not the other way around.
That made him even more reclusive.
I saw many symptoms of depression creeping into his life.
I would try and get him to go diving and do stuff to get his mind off it.
I would have him over for dinner and tried everything I knew to talk to him and turn him around, but to no avail.
He was his own worst enemy.
He went through a horrendous mid life crisis, the worst I've ever seen anybody have.
After a while he isolated himself and nobody could get a hold of him.
He stopped returning phone calls. I eventually drove by his house because I was worried and found out he sold it and split. There were new people living there.
A few weeks later I ran into a guy who worked for the same company that Larry did that he ended up selling everything he owned and moving back to Santa Cruz. I was told that he hooked up with a few of his old high school acid buddies from back in the 60's who were still living that life style and was going to live with them.
He said that Larry had completely gone off his rocker towards the end and finally just quit showing up to work.
All this was probably 5 years ago now.
I was in the dive shop last Wednesday getting fills and the owner had told me that Larry's ex wife had called and wanted them to tell me the next time they saw me that Larry had committed suicide.
So anyway, I'm trying to deal with it.
He even jokingly told me one time when we were on our way out to go diving that he had no retirement, he was just about junk at working (as an HVAC tech), and his exit strategy was to put a pill in his head.
We laughed it off then, but I guess he really meant it.
Take care buddy, I'll miss you.