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Rest and Recovery

TDEX was really(!) hectic.

First, I didn’t arrive at the show until the second day due to a scheduling conflict, so I didn’t have much time to adjust. Second, I had to say hi to lots of friends, which is the best part of the event, but it was difficult to catch everyone after things started to get busy.

Third, I had talks to give, which required preparation (yes…of course I wasn’t prepared in advance). And finally, I was running around shooting video interviews with some of the exhibitors.

video

By the end of each day, all I wanted to do was crash. Had I been alone, that’s exactly what I would have done, but with Gunther Deichmann in town, I spent as much time as I could plugging him with questions about Aperture since he’s a certified instructor…which meant staying up to about 2:00 every night. Of course, having the opportunity to get personalised instruction was worth sacrificing some sleep.

Incidentally…during one of our talks, we had one of those “the-world-is-such-a-small-place” moments.

We were chatting about memorable images, and I described a stunning black-and-white portrait of a girl that I saw while I was working in the Philippines in the early 90s. It was such a striking image that I called the photographer, introduced myself, and went over to his studio to meet him. He and his wife were incredibly nice, and he gave me a signed print of the photo I liked so much.

After all these years, I couldn’t immediately recall his name, but when Gunther heard me describe the photographer in question, he immediately ID-ed him…Bien Bautista.

Bien is well-known, particularly for his black-and-white images, and by coincidence, Gunther has been friends with him for a long time!

In case you’re interested, the image that captured my attention is posted on Bien’s website. Stunning images like this stay in my head forever.

Anyway, the upshot of all this rambling is that it’s still going to take a few days of R&R to return to some semblance of normality.

TDEX Talks

Today is the final day of TDEX. I’m coming down with a sore throat, perhaps from talking too much, or perhaps from continually being in air-conditioned environments over the past few days…I guess I’m more accustomed to tropical beaches at this point in life.

I did two talks yesterday, one on basic photography stuff for beginners, and the second on lighting. Actually, the second talk was more of a demo.

talk at tdex

With a lot of help from Aey and Mean, the show organisers, Canon, and a whole bunch of other people…I rigged up a Canon 5D Mark II to a large-screen TV and demonstrated how to take photos using natural and artificial light…just like you would underwater.

With no practice/ rehearsal, I was certainly relieved when everything worked properly!

My friend Khun Ake dropped by the show to translate for me (actually, it seemed like he was there more to make fun of me in Thai than to interpret), which was a big help and a lot of fun.

After my talks, Gunther gave a great intro into the capabilities and basic functions of Aperture. I picked up a few tips, which will no doubt streamline my workflow going forward.

If you’re around and missed yesterday, I’ll be doing two more talks this afternoon, at 14:00 and 15:30, across from the Canon booth, in the main hallway, and Gunther’s talk is at 16:15.

TDEX

It’s the second day of TDEX, but just the first full day for me. I got into Bangkok yesterday and went to the show for a few hours, but left a bit early to grab dinner and crash (though actually, I ended up staying up ’til pretty late answering emails and such).

I’m about to head out with a bunch of friends to a place that specialises in awesome pad thai, something I really need, as I basically haven’t eaten since breakfast. It’s a local restaurant that I’d have no hope of finding myself…and let’s just say that the pad thai is frickin’ awesome.

Anyway, here’s a snapshot from today…Mean looking at a portfolio of Gunther’s amazing photos from his recent trip to India…on Gunther’s iPhone. Some of the images are online here. I encourage you to take a look.

Gunther is an Apple certified instructor for Aperture, and he’s here to do a couple of talks about the software. I managed to grab him for breakfast today and fire off a bunch of questions, and I’ll probably do the same tomorrow.

mean and gunther

Custom Wetsuits

Believe it or not, we made this video the first time we met Khun Pachara, who’s the owner of Hotwave Wetsuits in Phuket.

I’m usually quite serious, but Khun Pachara was really silly. It was all her fault. Honestly.

Article: Tradition

This is an editorial (click to download 108 kB PDF) that appeared recently in ultraMARINE magazine, a bi-monthly publication in the UK for aquarists.

Tradition
You know something I really enjoy? Thinking critically about issues and practices that most people accept and take for granted just because ‘that’s the way it’s always been’.

Sure, I recognise that collective experience and wisdom embedded in commonly accepted practices and traditions often make sense, but sometimes, customary ways of doing things are based on outdated thinking or information. Blindly adhering to the same old ways of doing things occasionally means missing something that’s patently obvious.

Take blood for example.

For nearly 200 hundred years, blood transfusions have been a no-brainer. Everyday, in hospitals and clinics around the world, people receive transfusions of this vital body fluid without a second thought. In fact, having a well-stocked blood bank is almost a prerequisite for running any modern medical facility.

The practice of providing supplemental blood to patients is so thoroughly entrenched that no one ever thought to question the practice — at least not until Dr Sunil Rao of the Duke University Medical Centre decided have a second look.

Conducting a study of people who suffered acute coronary syndrome, Dr Rao found that patients receiving blood transfusions to address low red bloodcell count were much more likely to die than those who didn’t.

That’s right. Giving blood to patients who need it may actually be killing them.

Recent studies have further underscored Dr Rao’s initial findings, suggesting that there’s something fundamentally wrong with blood transfusions, or at least with the way we do them. Fortunately, Dr Jonathan Stamler and other colleagues of Dr Rao appear to have solved this counterintuitive conundrum. As it turns out, when blood is removed from our bodies, concentrations of dissolved nitric oxide (NO) drop precipitously, as much as 70% within a day.

The reason this matters is simple. NO serves to dilate blood vessels, which increases
blood f low. Without NO, arteries don’t dilate, meaning it’s difficult for blood cells to pass or deliver life-giving oxygen. Worse still, NO-deficient blood appears to scavenge NO from other places in the body, creating a cascade of constricting blood vessels… in essence, a recipe for strokes, heart attacks and other unpleasant life-threatening events.

Armed with this recent insight doctors should be able to address the issue in short order simply by ensuring that sufficient quantities of nitric oxide are added to stored blood before being administered to patients.

The point of this little anecdote? Just because something’s been done the same way for a long time doesn’t make it right. In this example, the willingness of one person to re-examine something that most people believed to be beyond question will no doubt result in countless lives saved.

Stop for a moment to consider traditional practices in Asia in this light.

One of the primary reasons many people give for continuing to consume shark fins, seek out concoctions containing endangered animal parts, covet tiger steaks, lust after seal-penis love potions and the like… is tradition.

Oft-repeated statements like: ‘It’s always been like this’, ‘You just don’t appreciate tradition’, ‘My parents told me I should eat shark fin’, etc. are but a few variations on this theme.

In other words, with the collective wisdom of our forebears as rationale (or perhaps more accurately, as rationalisation), tradition often demands that we abdicate thought and just ‘go with the flow’. There’s an inherent assumption that if something has been practised for years, decades, centuries or more, then it’s perfectly ok.

But just as continuing blood transfusions in the same old way would be folly given what we now know, blindly sticking to old beliefs is simply asking for disaster.

Lest someone accuse me of having no respect for tradition, let me make clear that I’m not advocating ditching all traditional practices. Not by a long shot.

The point I’m making is that it’s our responsibility, both individually and as collective societies, to re-evaluate commonly accepted practices in the context of our circumstances today, not those of our ancestors hundreds or thousands of years ago.

Doing the same things the same way, every time, all of the time can be easy and comforting, but re-examining old beliefs in new ways may be just what the doctor ordered.

10 Great Places to Eat in Phuket

In case it’s not completely obvious, I love the fact that I get to try lots of great food in many of the places I travel to, especially in Asia.

When I was in Phuket last year, we spent two entire days eating at local food stalls and restaurants…places not on the tourist map.

This is a short video summary of 10 recommendations for places to try, which goes together with this PDF file that has details of the specific locations and dishes…in case you’re heading over to Phuket.

Outtakes

This video stuff is turning out to be more fun than I imagined. Doing video coverage at DEEP Indonesia actually made going to a dive show fun (everyone knows that going to dive shows is generally at the very bottom of my want-to-do list).

Actually, I have more fun messing around than I do with the serious stuff that actually makes it into the final cuts…like in these outtakes from the DEEP Indonesia 2009 video footage:

DEEP Indonesia Video

I’m on the way back from the DEEP Indonesia 2009 show in Jakarta. Completely exhausted, but had a blast.

One of the reasons I’m so tired is that I spent every day running around the show with Aey and Mean to get photos and video, which we’re editing and putting up for the rest of the week. Here’s the first:

And this is the wrap-up video:

Second Video from the Similan Islands

Here’s a second video clip from a recent trip to Phuket and the Similan Islands. This one focuses on the passengers who were with us on the M/V Dive Asia 1.

Something Old, Something New

“The only way to learn is to knock yourself off balance whenever you’re comfortable.”

A man I worked with some years ago gave me that bit of advice, and it’s served me well. In fact, without realising it, I had been following this life philosophy of sorts for pretty much my entire life, initially by circumstance, later on by choice.

For example, I’ve lived in so many places in such a wide variety of circumstances that it’s a challenge to remember them all. As a result, I’ve been immersed in all sorts of cultures, which means it’s probably much easier for me to adapt to new and unusual situations than it is for people who’ve led a more stable, settled life.

Another example…I’ve worked in a many different industries, ranging from french fry cook to women’s clothing salesman, real estate agent to machine tool operator in a naval shipyard, pizza delivery (go Domino’s!) to genetics lab researcher (to this day, I detest fruit flies), investment banker to power plant developer, English-language school owner to cosmetics company owner…and most recently, underwater photographer.

It’s been a wild, crazy…and ridiculously fulfilling, ride.

As scattered as my life may seem when presented this way, there’s always that one over-riding theme. Whenever I’ve felt too comfortable, too complacent, I’ve switched and done something completely different.

Sometimes, that entailed physically moving to a different location; sometimes it meant a switch in careers; occasionally, there were minor adjustment, like taking on new projects (for instance, that led to my award-winning book Silent Symphony); and a few times, it was something as trivial as completely changing my wardrobe (though limits to my fashion sense meant this was effectively throwing out white T-shirts and buying black ones instead).

So what’s the point?

Well, the past few years have been a period of continuous change…again, some by choice, some by circumstance. But one thing I’ve consciously done is to study as much as I can about the effect that changes in technology are having on media and communication.

I have no idea what got me interested in this. I just know that I am, at this point in life, fascinated by the cataclysmic shifts in communication technology. I’m fascinated because such changes have made my life more efficient and fun, but also because I’m cognizant of the fact that we’re living in a time of creative destruction.

We are watching certain industries and ways of doing things go as extinct as the dinosaurs, while witnessing the birth of newer ones to take their place, akin to the rise of mammals and birds after the saurians had their day.

We’re watching as some people adapt, while others stick their heads in the sand. We’re watching as technology simultaneously engenders opportunity and crushes entire industries.

To bring this post back to underwater photography: As I stated in my first post this year, there’s no turning back, and everyone has to adapt to the rapidly changing circumstances.

In the spirit of change…the video below is something new for me…being in front of a camera instead of behind it.

I must admit, I’m much more comfortable looking through a viewfinder than I am being looked at through a viewfinder. But, in keeping with the “knock yourself off balance” philosophy, I’m giving this a go (of course, I’ll continue to take photos and write articles).

By no stretch of the imagination do I think I’ve delivered an Oscar-winning performance, but I know I’ll learn from my mistakes, improve over time, and hopefully, get to the point where I can be reasonably good at communicating through this medium, just as I’ve learned to do so with images and text.

Why? Because it’s new technology. It’s fun. It’s a great new way to communicate. It’s a learning experience. And it’s a challenge.

If you can’t view the streaming video, the original is here, where there’s a link to download as an .avi file or .mp4 via iTunes.

Article: Black and White

This is an editorial (220 kB) that appeared recently in ultraMARINE magazine, a bi-monthly publication in the UK for aquarists.

Articles About Ambon (Japanese)

If you happen to read Japanese, here’s a PDF article (5.9MB) about Ambon. I also have an article about Ambon in the most recent issue (Feb ’09) of Diver magazine in Japan (though I don’t have a PDF for that one).