I appreciate your thoughts Diver0001. This is about feelings in addition to factual research. Perceptions and anecdotal experiences are valid and important. I may perceive a comment as offensive, though the person who made it, may not have meant it in that manner. I'm trying to get a barometer of the public perceptions and create an article that is informative. It is not an attack on men. In fact many of the private responses I have received were from men, a number of whom identified gender biases they have struggled with. I can personally attest to the fact that sometimes men also face issues of sexism. They can sometimes feel that they are held to a higher standard on an expedition and feel the need to compete more aggressively than a woman who may be applauded for strong participation and working hard.
Like I said, I am interested in all experiences and anecdotes either privately or publicly. They all contribute to a conversation that is worth having. Thanks for your participation.
Jill
Like I said, I am interested in all experiences and anecdotes either privately or publicly. They all contribute to a conversation that is worth having. Thanks for your participation.
Jill
I think by using the words "will feel" hits the nail right on the head. I think if you're going to write a credible article about it you're going to need some academic back up. My advice would be to look for a professor of cultural anthropology (after all it's a global sport) or gender studies or something to that effect as a starting point and see if there is any theoretical or scientific evidence to suggest that scuba diving is inherently different than any other mixed gender activity..... or at the very least to get help postulating a credible theory that you write to.
Otherwise it will be just be like an opinion column in a newspaper, most of which are not with worth their weight in ink.
R..