Date: Fri 27-Mar-1998
Date: Fri 27-Mar-1998
Publication: Bee
Author: CURT
Quick Words:
Jeff-White-column-sharks
Full Text:
Just Making It Down Under
By Jeff White
"Don't worry, Mate," John, my instructor, stated in his most assuring voice.
"They're harmless."
He must have been able to see the tension that riddled every muscle in my
body. I stared with uneasiness into the entrance pool, and with even more
trepidation at the opening leading into the actual aquarium. A few small white
tip sharks swam past the opening. Then a much larger blue shark. I took a deep
breath, and waded in.
I have never been an ocean lover, or a water lover for that matter. When I was
younger, vacations to the beach often highlighted a stark contrast between my
brother and I: where it seemed that some natural disaster would have to occur
to pull him from the water, I was always content with a short dip.
Truth be told, the sheer size of the ocean has always frightened me. Tales of
drowning and shark attacks etched themselves into the deepest parts of that
fear. I've played the scene over and over again in my mind: Richard Dryfuss'
eyes exploding off his forehead as the great shark attacks his cage in Jaws .
Thoughts like these formed their own body of water in my mind as the ferry
bobbed across Sydney Harbour. My destination was Manly Island, one of the many
small outcroppings of land that dot the harbor where I had enrolled in a
"Discover SCUBA" course at the Manly Aquarium.
Simple enough, I thought. The first hour would offer the basics of breathing
and moving underwater, weighted by gear. But the course would take a turn
towards the absurd: a full hour of swimming inside the aquarium with its
inhabitants, culminating in feeding sharks. "What Am I Doing?" resonated
through my mind.
As far back as childhood we are taught to perceive fear as a bad thing. It's
the stuff of horror movies, noises under the bed or physics exams. Fear was
often our earliest educational tool. "I'll teach you," parents promised,
usually after talking back to them.
A climbing friend of mine once revealed to me that he harbored an immense fear
of heights. "Why do you still climb?" I asked him. His reply was candid and to
the point: "I don't want to lose the fear."
If society conditioned us to treat fear as a negative stimuli, why do some of
us seek out risk? Why do we continue to climb? What on earth would possess us,
acknowledging the presence of sharks, to just wade in? The answer rests in
that biochemical cocktail, adrenaline.
Fear is simply our body's way of preparing for an emergency. Adrenaline starts
pumping, respiration increases, the heart beats faster, the central nervous
system is stimulated. All of these factors fine tune our senses. Our
concentration levels increase; our mental focus sharpens. As the situation
grows more dicey, as flight starts to win over fight, our alertness increases,
and we get through .
To some, this brings a state of euphoria, a "natural high." Others just
experience the relief of having "made it." Whichever reaction it is, the
presence of fear allows us all to push our limits that much farther, to truly
come to terms with our capabilities. The lesson is simple: keep climbing the
same rock, and you'll get used to the height. So next time, climb higher.
These thoughts swam through my mind as I made my way into the aquarium. For
the past hour I had learned the basics of SCUBA. The hand signals, the
importance of "popping" your ears as one dives deeper, the feeling of
breathing and weightlessness under water. Still, I was anxious about the task
at hand. Was I prepared to spend an hour in there?
As I made my way down to what seemed at the time as abysmal depths, my lungs
expanded and contracted at race car speed. My ears exploded and my face mask
seemed to want to leave a permanent tattoo on my forehead.
Then I saw my first shark, a sand shark, not much larger than a small dog,
just floating a few yards in front of me. I made my way, as surreptitiously as
possible, towards it. It hardly moved. Closer. Still, no movement. Before I
knew it, I was staring at it, the shark just a foot or so away from my mask. I
thought, "I'm having a staring contest with a sand shark." And I wasn't about
to blink.
The shark fled, and as I followed it, I became aware of the myriad types of
fish and other marine life that were sharing the water with me. Giant Sting
Rays, which looked like floating pancakes, cast huge shadows over the aquarium
floor as they glided through the water. Sea turtles, which moved with
surprising grace to my left.
I made my way through the underwater rainbow of fish towards the area where
the sharks liked to reside. An eight-foot blue shark passed about five feet
above my right shoulder. White tip, sand, and nurse sharks, of varying sizes,
all weaved around one another.
John looked at as if to say, "now for the fun part." By his side was a small
bucket out of which he pulled a small, dead fish and handed it to me. My heart
firmly ensconced in my throat, I held my arm out straight, forming a right
angle with the rest of my body. John had explained beforehand that the types
of sharks we were dealing with were harmless, lagoon dwelling sharks.
Australians refer to them simply as "reefies." Man-eating sharks, like Great
Whites, they call "munchies."
No sooner had my armed locked out straight than a small nurse shark came up
from behind and snatched its snack from my trembling hand. With the
realization that I still had all my limbs, I reached for another fish. A few
minutes passed before a six-foot (adjusting for adrenaline magnification,
probably only about four feet) blue shark took interest and plucked the fish
from my clenched fist.
As a shark's mouth opens, a kind of lower eyelid, a white membrane, covers the
eye so that, at the moment of munch, the animal is effectively blind. This
protects the shark's eyes from its prey. On a few occasions I was tempted to
wave a snack through the water, and just as the shark was about to commence
feeding, jerk it away from the blind fish. Ha-ha, shark. But the thought of
playing practical jokes on a shark, man-eater or not, ultimately did not seem
smart.
As the minutes flowed by, I became aware of every nuance of that aquarium. The
little bits of coral growing in dark corners. The tiny sharks' teeth that
would blend with the sand on the aquarium floor. The "Oh my god, shark!"
instinct soon dissipated into a calm brought on by the rhythmic act of hearing
each breath going in and out. My muscles were relaxed. I was in a meditative
state. John's tap on my shoulder provided a cruel gong of reality: it was time
to surface.
So I emerged from the tank, leaving my tension and anxiety to swim permanently
with the marine life. The same fear I felt when stepping into the entrance
pool had provided a focus for the deed at hand while I was submerged. I saw
things, felt things, and surfaced unscathed.
We all face our daily entrance pools, with a view of shark-infested waters not
far away. When every instinct shouts "go back," we need to take a deep breath
and wade in. Holding out a fish is optional.
(Editor's note: Jeff White, of Willowbrook Lane, Newtown, is currently
enrolled at Monash University, in Melbourne, Australia, where he is
participating in a semester of study abroad. His home university is Boston
College, where he is a junior studying political science with the hope of
becoming a journalist.)
