[#sorryimnotsorry for the lack of updating over Fourth of July weekend]
I think it’s not a good sign if the most exciting part of my
day was going to the market, and not scuba diving for the first time in open
water.
The day started with remedial scuba. I had to meet my scuba instructor
and apprentice at 7am to plunge into the freezing pool while Cory got to sleep
in and stay warm (and very much enjoy my absence from our shared bed…his fault…he
booked the hotel). This, simply because during our pool session the day before
I refused to fill my mask up with water and blow the water out of it. I mean…this
is an absurd exercise. I have a solution: build a better flippin eye mask! One
that doesn’t fall off or fill up with water. Give me an astronaut helmet! It
doesn’t make sense to me to purposely fill my mask up with water (or,
worse, take it off!) “just in case” it actually happens. Just ensure that it
doesn’t actually happen! Worse, in order to really do this properly you have to
breathe through your mouth. I’m not a mouth breather and I’m actually quite
proud of myself for that. Middle school could have very easily been worse than
it was if I were a mouth breather.
That said, I did feel a huge sense of accomplishment when I
did successfully do this. Sense of accomplishment was lost when I then
dislocated my shoulder. A conversation about my frequently-dislocating shoulder
ensued and my instructor threatened to banish me (and therefore Cory) to the
ridiculous-sounding “Clownfish” reef if it was an issue in the ocean. (Because,
maybe there was a chance that it would only be an issue in the pool?)
So with a successful remedial scuba lesson, off to Clownfish
Reef we went. This is where I learned that my least favorite part of scuba was
not the stupidity of filling my mask up with water, it was transferring from
snorkel to respirator because – I swear – the snorkel was too big for my mouth.
I just kept on breathing in water. Eventually, I either did this correctly or
my instructor gave up because we were going to be allowed to actually go down
to the reef.
And that’s when I learned that my least favorite part of
diving is “equalizing”, aka the process of helping your ears adjust to descending
to 10m of depth in water, aka 2 ATM OF PRESSURE. My ears were not psyched about
this. I tried to scream at my instructor that THIS IS NOT NATURAL – WHY AM I
DOING THIS TO MYSELF/MY EARS but I was inhibited by my respirator and the
logistics of being able to talk under water. Thankfully, though, at this point
in my African adventure, I had become quite adept at communicating without
using words. My instructor understood what I was trying to communicate
(possibly because I was so good at “communicating” this, possibly because this
happens every time the instructor does this with a new student), but instead of
turning around and letting me abort right there, he just stopped and waited for
me to calm down and “equalize” at that level before dropping another dreaded
meter.
We finally reached the sandy bottom. And that’s where I
finally learned my actual least favorite part of scuba diving: buoyancy. We had
to figure out how exactly to use our “breathing” to stay buoyant in the water.
This was confusing to me because it was drilled into our minds that the number
one rule in scuba diving is to never hold your breath but then it seemed
that we were supposed to hold our breath to “fill our lungs” to ascend a bit. As
a last resort, we were allowed to put some air in our BCD [buoyancy control
device], but put too much in and you would shoot to the top, accidentally but
definitely actually putting your ears through the gauntlet of “equalizing”
again.
No. I did not like scuba diving.
OTHER MOMENTS FROM THE DAY
-
Sitting on the beach and paying the boy trying
to sell bracelets to go up and buy us beers from the market (we were never
going to buy those bracelets). Then he offered to open the beer with his teeth
and we screamed at him to stop. Didn’t want to be responsible for any broken
teeth. Of course then, when he walked away, we realized that we didn’t have a
way to open the beer, and going up to the market to get a bottle opener would’ve
defeated the process.
-
Going to a nearby hotel to watch the Netherlands-Spain
game but being without internet and too embarrassed to ask anybody so we didn’t
know the significance of the game or which team was which until there was a
goal.
[The local CVS just told me it will take at least1.5 weeks to develop my disposable cameras. Apparently if I go to a different CVS, it can be done in 1 hour. But I'm just not sure I'll get to the other CVS within 1.5 weeks...]
[The local CVS just told me it will take at least1.5 weeks to develop my disposable cameras. Apparently if I go to a different CVS, it can be done in 1 hour. But I'm just not sure I'll get to the other CVS within 1.5 weeks...]
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