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Yes, but after the hundredth time of checking for no reason, one stops to take it seriously, you know the boy who cried wolf thing.J.R.:As a "diving rule"... yep... yer' right. It doesn't, however, lessen any validity that MOF *may* be an indicator and one should take a second look.
Let me limit it then to what I can be absolutely sure of: There was a time (up to say the mid 1970s) that on the California coast from Moro Bay north to the Oregon border, that if you saw a diver in the water with their mask on their forehead they were either in trouble or were a tourist (which meant they were likely in trouble anyway<G>).J.R.:"... we can *no longer* say that" is a problem phrase for me... It implies that we were once able to... I would argue that we have NEVER been able say that.
Please don’t think of MOF as a SIGNAL. It never was used as a SIGNAL, as in, “I think I’m in trouble … hmmm … maybe I better go MOF so that I can get help!” Rather it was recognized as an indicator, an instinctive action of a diver who was in, or who might soon be in, trouble.
Divers who are in trouble and are “in control” have many ways to signal that they were (and continue to be) taught, the entire point was that if MOF was unacceptable behavior in a diver who was “under control,” then … since it is an instinctive move, it was useful as an indicator.
It has become a bone of contention because of the aggressive and deprecating way in which it was a taught, “real diver’s don’t do that,” or “you don’t look like a diver with your mask on your forehead,” etc., etc., etc. So many real divers, good divers, competent divers, accomplished divers, who were not part of the compact, took umbrage and invented DIR just to show us left-coasters how it feels (See I can treat it with some levity … now where is Waldo anyway?). My real concern with levity, as respects this issue, is just that the conversation (at least as I’ve observed it) seems to have lost content, even from folks who I respect and usually pay close attention to (sort of like they've all got their computer masks on their foreheads).