The Story So Far ...

We said farewell to our work friends at the RSPCA and BBC on 14 September, farewell to our families on 3 October, and set off for Africa to save cheetahs, decorate school buildings, and look around a bit. After a trip home for Christmas, we headed for South East Asia on 6 January -- where we were stunned by Qatar and Cambodia, taught novice monks in Laos, and acted as security guards at an Elephant Festival. It was back home for four weeks to look after John's dad, before we tangoed our way through five South American countries in fifteen days. We then snooped our way through New Zealand, dipped our toes into Fiji, drove-thru California and were home from home with family in Vancouver.

Now, we are home itself. Fulfilled, happy, and ready to earn the respect of our friends and family by knuckling down and earning some money once again ...

Monday, 16 May 2011

Down Under, Down Under 1: Under Pressure Over Pressure

Artist's Impression of how I felt

Of the handful of "O" levels I notched up back in 1982, the one I was proudest of was my "C" (bare pass) in Physics.  During two years in the classroom laboratory, volumes, weights, density and velocity had never clicked, and I put my eventual pass down to sheer rote learning of laws with which my arts loving brain had simply refused to engage.

So it was with some alarm that I recently found myself struggling to answer my Fijian dive-master as he coaxed me towards an understanding of the volume of water that might be exerted upon a scuba diver when at a certain depth.  We'd watched the video and read the text book that morning.  Henry had sailed through his multiple guess test that by law had to precede a scuba dive, but I sat numbed by this weighty issue.  And the more the gentle instructor tried to explain these laws of pressure, the greater pressure I felt.

It was all fine in the end: I feigned a sudden understanding, relief all round followed, and we headed for the pool where much fun was had learning how to use masks and cannisters of compressed air.  I had, after all, answered most of the questions correctly, so there'd be no risk of lung collapse on our first (accompanied) dive the following day.  But that fake understanding smile of mine about water pressure jolted me back to the understanding smiles of one or two Laotian monks back in February, suddenly grasping (or so it had seemed) my explanation of the pluperfect passive.

Perhaps I hadn't been such a splendid teacher after all.  Deep, deep down, perhaps they just felt a touch sorry for me, drowning in their incomprehension.  But they were by then able to speak passable English, and the following morning I did indeed find myself communing with the coral.

John

1 comment:

  1. Just took a look to catch up on NZ and you're already in Fiji! Lots of brought-back memories of Milford Sound and swimming with dolphins, though I don't think I had a wetsuit!

    Enjoy the last few weeks - it all seems to be passing so fast. But we're all looking forward to having you back!

    Love Mags x

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