Gareth Lock - Inspirational founder of The Human Diver

Gareth Lock - Inspirational founder of The Human Diver

Gareth Lock is the inspirational founder of The Human Diver. On leaving his 25-year career in the RAF he was already an experienced diver having started to learn the sport in 1999. His very first dive took place in Greece while on holiday. However, it was while on work trips to Cape Town and San Diego that he knew diving would become an important part of his life.

As he became more experienced in diving, he realised that it was all about teamwork and there’s one thing the military do very well – working as a team. They know through extensive training and experience in the theatre of war that little mistakes around behaviour, poor decisions, lack of situational awareness and complacency costs lives.

Sadly, Gareth found that often in diving that holistic ethos was lacking. Teams were not always led well, did not get on with each other and members often operated in separate silos without any consideration for those also sharing that diving experience. Dysfunctional teams were often left to cope by instructors who had become complacent and disconnected. Much training focused on technical expertise – which is critically important – yet didn’t touch on the equal importance of human behaviour and team development.

Gareth decided to do something about it and has set himself a mission of introducing human factors training into the diving profession globally. It’s not always easy. There has been resistance to his systems-based approach. However, he’s remained committed and has travelled the world sharing his story.




The Human Diver on Facebook

The Human Diver on Instagram

The Human Diver on Twitter

Gareth's website: The Human Diver

Gareth's book: Under Pressure


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    00:00:04
    Matt: Podcast for the inquisitive diver. Hey there, dive buddies

    00:00:07
    and welcome to the show. My next guest has served 25 years in the

    00:00:11
    Royal air force and fell in love with the sport of diving way back

    00:00:14
    in 1999, he recognized that there was a significant similarity

    00:00:18
    between life as a military man and that of a diver teamwork.

    00:00:22
    However, there was an even more significant difference between

    00:00:25
    the two when compared through the holistic ethos lens, he decided

    00:00:29
    to do something about this and same self, a mission to

    00:00:31
    introducing human factors, training into the diving

    00:00:34
    profession globally. In 2019, he released a book entitled under

    00:00:39
    pressure, which has since sold thousands of copies. Now I have

    00:00:43
    to admit that I respect and admire him for his brave

    00:00:45
    contributions to the dive industry. And I say brave, not

    00:00:48
    because I'm admitting a macro shuttle rather than I recognize

    00:00:51
    that difficulties and individual may face in attempting to create

    00:00:54
    change, even when it is for the betterment of all involved. I

    00:00:59
    honestly believe that what he has done so far will most definitely

    00:01:01
    save lives and probably already has done. So, Mr. Gareth Locke,

    00:01:05
    it's an absolute pleasure to meet you. Welcome to the show.

    00:01:08
    Gareth: Thank you very much. Really appreciate it. It says

    00:01:11
    great to have an invite on here and yeah, it has been a challenge

    00:01:15
    and has required a significant amount of persistence to, to get

    00:01:20
    this girl.

    00:01:20
    Matt: Yeah, I bet. So, um, w w was it a little bit like a red

    00:01:25
    flag football or something to you ? Like a little Jack Russell just

    00:01:27
    chomping at the heels?

    00:01:28
    Gareth: Well, my, my sort of personality traits are about sort

    00:01:32
    of values based and it's like, I've got to get this done. And,

    00:01:36
    and that actually has been a bit of a hindrance when I first

    00:01:39
    started, because it was this, uh , evangelical approach of you

    00:01:45
    have to change and, and a few people off and burnt a few

    00:01:49
    bridges and took a number of years to, to rebuild those. Um,

    00:01:55
    and I think that's the same with anybody. Who's got a strong value

    00:01:59
    based. Who's trying to create change. It's, it's tempering

    00:02:04
    that, that attitude to look for the long game, rather than trying

    00:02:09
    to do something. Now, you're never going to change the

    00:02:13
    direction of, uh, uh, you know, saying iceberg, you know, the one

    00:02:15
    that's broken off the Antarctica, you're never going to change that

    00:02:19
    direction really easily. Um, it takes little nudges and actually

    00:02:26
    where I've had the biggest successes is bottom up rather

    00:02:30
    than top down. Um, because there are people at the bottom who

    00:02:34
    recognize actually this is really useful, knowledgeable stuff that

    00:02:39
    as you say will, and I already know that with people, who've

    00:02:43
    emailed me saying, you know what? I listened to, you know, a

    00:02:47
    webinar or a podcast, or read something of yours or watch their

    00:02:50
    phone only. And that's changed my attitude as to how, um, how I've

    00:02:58
    approached a and I've thumbed it early, uh, or I've not got in, or

    00:03:02
    I've changed what we were going to do. And to me, that that's a

    00:03:06
    huge, huge buzz because it's like, yes, you know, the, the

    00:03:12
    changing one person at a time is , uh, this is how you can change

    00:03:16
    the world. Yeah. It takes a long time.

    00:03:19
    Matt: Well, you've got to start somewhere and then just spread

    00:03:21
    the legs. Um, now just to back it up, uh, we smudge for those

    00:03:26
    people that are listening that have no clue what human factors

    00:03:29
    is. Do you want to try and break it down into its most simplistic

    00:03:32
    form? Just so we've got a basis to go from. Yeah,

    00:03:35
    Gareth: Yeah, yeah, sure. So in its simplest term, it is how to

    00:03:41
    make it easier to do the right thing and harder to do the wrong

    00:03:45
    thing. And that means looking at individuals, it means looking at

    00:03:52
    work or tasks, and he's looking at equipment, it means looking at

    00:03:56
    interactions and paperwork and understand how to reduce the

    00:04:02
    friction to do the right thing. So for example, you know,

    00:04:06
    checklists are a big thing in diving at moments. And then when

    00:04:10
    you look at how they're written, they're often sweeping

    00:04:14
    generalization here, a written from a point of view of liability

    00:04:20
    rather than execution. So there's a huge body of evidence that

    00:04:24
    says, how do you design a checklist that takes human

    00:04:28
    performance variability that could be errors, um, and try to

    00:04:34
    design them out and a checklist. Isn't just a piece of paper floor

    00:04:39
    . It doesn't, it's not just a piece of paper to make it

    00:04:41
    effective. It requires a social and a cultural setup and a mental

    00:04:46
    approach that says I'm using this checklist because I'm fallible

    00:04:50
    and I will make a mistake and it's getting that message across.

    00:04:55
    So there's a whole raft of issues that, that need to be addressed

    00:05:00
    in a, as you sort of touched on earlier holistic manner or

    00:05:03
    systemic way, rather than trying to cherry pick or fix the diver.

    00:05:10
    Cause they're there, the stupid ones is actually creating an

    00:05:14
    environment where it's easier to do the right thing and harder to

    00:05:17
    do the wrong thing. Yeah.

    00:05:18
    Matt: Yeah. And I suppose one of the major barriers that you've

    00:05:21
    got there is, um, piece of people's personal feelings of

    00:05:24
    embarrassment. If they're going to thumb a dive when everyone

    00:05:27
    else has more confident or more experienced, whatever,

    00:05:31
    Gareth: Oh, totally. That, you know, the peer pressure that

    00:05:34
    we're under and the, you know, ultimately we're social

    00:05:37
    creatures. We, we like to be conform to the social norms. And,

    00:05:43
    and that's why, you know, you can start to create change at a lower

    00:05:48
    level with individuals and small groups, because then you can

    00:05:52
    start to get a swelling it's quite difficult to create change

    00:05:55
    top down because you still need to create that, that swell, that,

    00:06:01
    that, that influence and social conformance that happens. But you

    00:06:05
    know, that that sort of peer pressure, it might be touched on

    00:06:09
    in, in diver training and instructor development. But I

    00:06:13
    don't think it's anywhere near emphasized how much influence

    00:06:18
    instructors leaders and peers have on others' behaviors. And

    00:06:24
    you don't have to say something almost silence is enough to speak

    00:06:29
    volumes. Um, when somebody questions is this a good idea?

    00:06:34
    And I, nobody even acknowledges that, that, you know, Oh, I'm not

    00:06:38
    sure about this Barbie. Okay. And you haven't actually said

    00:06:41
    anything or you've just agreed with them. Um, so there's,

    00:06:46
    there's a huge bit that that looks at, or that should be

    00:06:50
    looked at in terms of interactions.

    00:06:53
    Matt: Hmm. So the idea behind the training that you provide is to

    00:06:58
    teach people not only how to recognize it in themselves, but

    00:07:02
    have the confidence to be able to say so, and also recognize it in

    00:07:06
    other people within the group that I'm in with.

    00:07:09
    Gareth: Yeah, totally. I mean, and actually the core of the

    00:07:11
    training is based around the premise of creating a shared

    00:07:17
    mental model and an idea of what we're going to do as a team and

    00:07:23
    why are we going to do it? And that means that if there is some

    00:07:28
    form of dissent, you know, which is a good thing or some conflict

    00:07:32
    that the, the peers and the leadership have created

    00:07:35
    environment where actually you don't need to have courage. Um,

    00:07:40
    there's often this bit of people, you know, that you need to be

    00:07:42
    brave to speak up. This level of bravery is needed to overcome

    00:07:47
    some fear. And the fear is generated by the social

    00:07:52
    environment that the leaders, the instructors, the peer group that

    00:07:55
    are there and therefore it's their responsibility to change

    00:07:59
    that attitude, that, that, uh, environment, so that it is easy

    00:08:06
    to speak up rather than having to be brave and go, well, I'm going

    00:08:10
    to put my neck out on the line here because I'm going to say

    00:08:13
    something that isn't quite right. Um, so it's, yeah, there's a lot

    00:08:17
    to do. And that is a normal human thing. Um, because we are, if we

    00:08:23
    go back, you know, thousands of years to the African Savannah,

    00:08:28
    where you lived in a tribe in a thorn Bush ring, because that was

    00:08:33
    the protection from the lines, Hey, you had to be conformed to

    00:08:38
    the norms of the group because as long as you got booted out,

    00:08:42
    outside the phone book and you're on your own, so there are very

    00:08:48
    good reasons why we have social conformance, whether or not there

    00:08:53
    is as valid as they are, is a different thing, but you know,

    00:08:57
    it's hardwired. So yeah, the training is, is create that

    00:09:00
    shared mental model so that people know what's happening

    00:09:02
    next. And if something deviates, then they're able to sort of ask

    00:09:07
    the question and say, is this right? Are we going in the right

    00:09:10
    direction? Is this the right part of the wreck? Shouldn't we have

    00:09:13
    turned round on the reef at this point, you know, it's, there,

    00:09:17
    there are lots of things where, where this applies. Hmm.

    00:09:21
    Matt: So when we're talking about it straight away, I'm thinking

    00:09:24
    about a blog that I wrote about three years ago. And then I was

    00:09:28
    trying to describe, um, newcomers to the dive and industry or those

    00:09:34
    that want to do that open water training. And the two examples I

    00:09:38
    had was the alpha male who, you know, really big. I can do all

    00:09:44
    this and don't need to listen. And, uh, the timid lady, you

    00:09:49
    know, who would just focus and then do and do everything

    00:09:53
    correct. And for me, the human factor error all the way I see it

    00:09:59
    though, is that Mr. Belli big, the alpha male, um, was, was hide

    00:10:05
    in his true, um, fears and incompetencies of what was

    00:10:11
    coming. And I think it does make me look towards the, uh,

    00:10:19
    professional side of dive in and ask the question if there's been

    00:10:25
    people qualified to hastily too quickly and, you know, thinking

    00:10:30
    of zero to hero. And then all of a sudden, you're now teaching

    00:10:33
    people who have no clue how to dive in a wide variety of, um,

    00:10:39
    scenarios. Um, I suppose you bring in human factors into it

    00:10:46
    kind of puts a big question, Mark all over all of that stuff that

    00:10:50
    the majority of us in the dive industry know it occurs, but

    00:10:55
    don't really approach the subject.

    00:10:58
    Gareth: Yeah. It it's, um, it is a bit of an elephant in the room.

    00:11:03
    And so going to, to a wider sort of safety view as to why that

    00:11:09
    perception exists of why the current practices are okay, a lot

    00:11:15
    of safety is measured as the absence of accidents. So if you

    00:11:21
    don't have any accidents and we don't have any injuries, um, we

    00:11:26
    must be doing something right now that doesn't take into account

    00:11:30
    the number of people who are scared, um, who go off and do

    00:11:34
    some training and an, a terrified , um, they they've got that tick

    00:11:40
    and they've moved on and gone. I went diving, but I didn't like

    00:11:43
    it. And yet there shouldn't be a reason for that. Yes, there will

    00:11:46
    be a small percentage who are, um , not suited to diving and, you

    00:11:51
    know, and they aren't, um, being the right mental place to be

    00:11:55
    underwater. So, you know, you then look at, so the sort of why

    00:12:02
    the situation ends up as it is, is because you can cut away the

    00:12:07
    safety margins, the experience, the time that people are supposed

    00:12:13
    to do during training. And until you have lots of accidents, you

    00:12:17
    must be doing something. Okay. And again, that's normal human

    00:12:20
    behavior. We will look for short term gains over waiting for

    00:12:28
    long-term benefits. Um, and, and in the case of, of diving and

    00:12:32
    instruction and the zero, the hero of it is cool. I get to be a

    00:12:35
    dive instructor. And I, I, you know, I get to make money out of

    00:12:39
    my hobby. Um, and you're right. That as long as, as long as the

    00:12:46
    training environment in which the students are being taught is not

    00:12:52
    very, um, risky, you know, that there's no additional Jake

    00:12:57
    dangers involved and everything goes fine. That actually the

    00:13:01
    training must have been okay. The problem is we don't know what's

    00:13:05
    going to happen on the, on the dive or with a student. And so

    00:13:10
    actually you need to have a, almost a bigger box. You've got

    00:13:13
    the, sort of the core competencies or core skills that

    00:13:18
    you need. And then there's the bit that says, sit a bit further

    00:13:22
    out than that, that says these there excursions that you might

    00:13:25
    have. And my, you know, my personal view is a lot of diver

    00:13:31
    instructor training is teaching instructors how to teach a

    00:13:35
    student how to pass a class, which is not the same as how to

    00:13:40
    teach a diver, how to dive in the real world. Um, and, and if your

    00:13:45
    measure is, is people graduating well, w without issues, you must

    00:13:49
    be doing something right. Um,

    00:13:52
    Matt: Yeah. And that inherent skill embedded into second

    00:13:56
    nature.

    00:13:58
    Gareth: Yeah. And they get out of jail card for the organizations

    00:14:01
    is you are only, uh, certified to dive in conditions equal to

    00:14:07
    better than you've already been certified. Um, so that, that's

    00:14:12
    the bit that says, well, actually, you, you went diving in

    00:14:14
    the condition that you weren't trained for. Therefore, it's your

    00:14:16
    fault. It's like, well, hang on a minute. You know, you've got to

    00:14:20
    look at this at a system level rather than an individual level.

    00:14:25
    Matt: Yeah. But what, where does the system start and stop for

    00:14:29
    you? Because I was kind of discussing this podcast before we

    00:14:35
    started a, a couple of days ago. Actually, I've got a buddy of

    00:14:38
    mine coming on next week. I Steinback, no, look, I, um, he's

    00:14:42
    a cost director up in Cairns. And I wanted to clarify for myself,

    00:14:45
    albeit I am a multi-agency instructor. I wanted to know

    00:14:49
    specifically where the law starts and stops when it comes to

    00:14:54
    training. And it's so ambiguous, isn't it? And he, his answer was

    00:15:02
    literally when that, when people are in training, then you have to

    00:15:07
    follow the letter of the law. And the letter of the law is written

    00:15:09
    by whichever agency is teaching and whichever agency you're

    00:15:13
    teaching under. But as soon as that person is qualified and they

    00:15:16
    go off on their own, there's then no law that says a diver can't do

    00:15:21
    what they want. Um, so as soon as they are outside the boundaries

    00:15:26
    of what they've been taught, then, you know, the agencies are

    00:15:28
    safe.

    00:15:30
    Gareth: Oh, totally. And you know, the way that risk is

    00:15:33
    managed is all about risk transference. So from an eight,

    00:15:39
    you know, if I look at, so you ask the question, where's the

    00:15:41
    boundary of the system that this to me, the system starts at the

    00:15:47
    agency's level, or actually the bodies above. So the rebury, the

    00:15:50
    trainee council, the recreation, scuba training council, the world

    00:15:54
    recreation, steward, training council. Those are the levels.

    00:15:57
    That's the, this almost the top boundary. There might be some

    00:16:00
    government regulation that sits above that depending on the

    00:16:03
    country you're in. And then it ends down at the individual

    00:16:07
    diver. Now that's the system, whether or not people have

    00:16:11
    control or influence about what happens within that system. Well,

    00:16:14
    that's, that's the way that the system has been constructed. And

    00:16:18
    so the way the organizations are set up is about transferring risk

    00:16:23
    from them liability to the lowest level possible. That's what any

    00:16:28
    organization would do. So the use of liability waivers, uh,

    00:16:33
    transfers all of those things. It's about getting the risk down

    00:16:37
    to the diver and or the instructor. Um, you know, your

    00:16:42
    point about agency standards. I have to teach to the agency

    00:16:45
    standards because otherwise, if something goes wrong, I'm liable.

    00:16:50
    Now those agency standards may not be the best that are out

    00:16:55
    there, but they are at a level which allows the agency to manage

    00:17:00
    their own individual risk. Um, by bypassing it on, you know, is it

    00:17:05
    achievable to do those tasks? Yes. Right. It's an instructor

    00:17:08
    problem. If something goes wrong, if a diver goes out on a dive

    00:17:12
    operation, they will nearly always sign, uh, what, depending

    00:17:15
    on where you are in the world, liability waiver forms. Um, and

    00:17:19
    now I am accepting responsibility for what happens on this dive.

    00:17:24
    Now, interestingly in the UK. And I think Europe, they have to

    00:17:28
    change the liability waiver forms because I cannot sign away my

    00:17:33
    right for your incompetence. Now, you know, to Sue based on that, I

    00:17:38
    can't Sue based on my end competence, but I can suit based

    00:17:42
    on your incompetence. Um, whereas a lot of international waiver

    00:17:46
    forms basically say, I even Sue you, if you're incompetent,

    00:17:51
    there's time, we'll hang on a minute. That's your

    00:17:53
    responsibility to look after me. So, you know, where does the

    00:17:58
    system, and, and start that it's about when those students are in

    00:18:04
    their class, teaching them about the genuine risks that exist, not

    00:18:10
    just about the physical risk of being underwater, but also the

    00:18:14
    social risks that are there. So peer pressure, or the fact that

    00:18:19
    we will drift, we will have this normalization of deviance and

    00:18:23
    Dan, or has just published a great piece in GEs in-depth blog

    00:18:27
    today, talking about normalization of deviance and,

    00:18:31
    you know, looking at the fact that it is a normal behavior to

    00:18:34
    go from here's my rules and I'm drifting. And I will, I will say,

    00:18:40
    reduce my minimum gas. I'm going to end a dive with, or exceed my

    00:18:44
    deck or the runtime or whatever it is. And everything goes okay,

    00:18:49
    or it could be having more students on a class than you're

    00:18:52
    supposed to because I generate more revenue that way, but things

    00:18:56
    don't go wrong. Therefore nobody knows what what's happening. So

    00:19:00
    explaining these normal human behaviors allows risk to be

    00:19:05
    better managed after the training course or whatever it is,

    00:19:10
    understanding those error producing conditions, the

    00:19:14
    stressors that lead us to erode the safety margins that are on,

    00:19:20
    um, that is not explicitly taught in the training materials that,

    00:19:26
    that I've had people come, my ports go, and I'm an instructor

    00:19:29
    for this agency and this agency, and so-and-so this isn't, it

    00:19:32
    might be touched on, but it is not explicitly explained. And it

    00:19:37
    really should be put into the training programs that are there.

    00:19:41
    Matt: Sure. Are you trying to get them in there? You must be.

    00:19:44
    Gareth: I, I am. And I have been for quite a while, and I

    00:19:48
    understand the resistance from their part because actually, and

    00:19:53
    this is often something that's forgotten is that the training

    00:19:56
    agencies are businesses, albeit you know, publishing houses to

    00:20:02
    develop training materials that then sell onto instructor,

    00:20:06
    trainers and instructors, and then students trying to make

    00:20:10
    money out of human factors based training is really difficult

    00:20:15
    because it doesn't actually give you anything extra. It doesn't

    00:20:19
    allow you to go diving any deeper. It doesn't lay to use any

    00:20:22
    new equipment. Um, what it does is it allows you to use your

    00:20:26
    brain a bit more effectively. I think also part of the resistance

    00:20:31
    is that the majority of the decision makers in the, the

    00:20:36
    training agencies have never done any training with me. So they

    00:20:41
    don't even know what the programs are about and how it could fit

    00:20:46
    into their existing training materials. So there's a bit of,

    00:20:52
    um, let me say genuine ignorance , um, from, from their part of

    00:20:56
    what it looks like and how it can fit in. And the difficulty is

    00:21:00
    that I'm not a diving instructor, so I don't reach any of those

    00:21:04
    agencies. So I don't know what the materials look like, where it

    00:21:09
    slot in, where you could tell a specific story about maybe

    00:21:14
    cognitive biases, why we make the decisions we do, or how to create

    00:21:19
    effective communications within a team, um, by using certain

    00:21:24
    techniques that are there or how a team evolves in a training

    00:21:28
    environment, and then how it evolves in the real world diving

    00:21:32
    environment and the weaknesses that, that need to be recognized

    00:21:35
    and dealt with. So it's a bit of a, an unknown from their side and

    00:21:40
    I get it, you know, that they're there to make money, um, that

    00:21:44
    they're not charities

    00:21:45
    Matt: I'm gonna, I'm gonna play devil's advocate. And, um, it

    00:21:49
    obviously does have a massive place in our industry, but

    00:21:55
    doesn't have a place in recreational dive in for your,

    00:22:00
    some of vacation kind of guys that dive once or twice a year

    00:22:03
    that can't even remember how to put their equipment together. Are

    00:22:06
    they going to be able to remember what, what human factors is it

    00:22:09
    about?

    00:22:11
    Gareth: Um, so actually the real benefit of if human factors is

    00:22:16
    taught well is it's transparent to the activities that you're

    00:22:23
    doing. Um, and I suppose to answer your question, is there

    00:22:29
    something that that can help? Yes. So at a, at a recreational

    00:22:34
    level is the recognition that they're fallible, that they will

    00:22:37
    make mistakes. That that's the first thing. Um, and then look at

    00:22:43
    what are the strategies for, um, making sure that we reduce the

    00:22:48
    likelihood and that would be doing pre dive check. You know,

    00:22:51
    that that's a checklist, it's making sure that the instructors

    00:22:56
    and the dive masters who are operating in that environment,

    00:23:00
    role model, correct behaviors, because the, those recreational

    00:23:05
    divers, if you know, they're there for a week, um, on a

    00:23:08
    holiday and they might be diving three or four times, they will

    00:23:12
    look to the instructor or the dive master, or the guide for

    00:23:16
    what should be being done. And if the instructors and that the

    00:23:20
    guides dive masters, don't do any pre dive checks. You know, the,

    00:23:25
    the, uh, the clients will then turn around and go, Oh, cool.

    00:23:28
    When you get to be really good, you don't have to do checks,

    00:23:32
    whereas actually the other way round. So it's, it's how you

    00:23:35
    influence others. So it doesn't have to be pure directive and

    00:23:41
    part of the lesson, but it can be influenced and role model by

    00:23:47
    behaviors, by others within the, or by others within the, this

    00:23:51
    sort of system that, that the dive center or, or the liverboard

    00:23:54
    or whatever.

    00:23:55
    Matt: And to be honest, I mean, you touched on one of my pet

    00:23:58
    hates, there is people not setting up their own equipment

    00:24:01
    and not know how to do it properly. And I spent a year in

    00:24:04
    two fi in Papua New Guinea, and every diver that came to visit

    00:24:08
    and dive with us, had to do their own equipment sets up before they

    00:24:12
    go on the boat just the first time. And then the boys would

    00:24:15
    take over and they could check as the boys go. But just for my own

    00:24:19
    sanity and sanitization, you do your own gear and you would be

    00:24:23
    amazed at how many guests would complain because they have to do

    00:24:28
    their own equipment. And then the humility, when they realize that

    00:24:32
    they don't know how to do their own equipment, because they've

    00:24:34
    not done it for so long now, surely that answered an inherent

    00:24:38
    problem. That's going on in our industry already with trying to

    00:24:41
    be too customer Carey. And, you know, um, and again, for the

    00:24:49
    guests that are assuming everything's going to be done for

    00:24:51
    them now leads me onto another little point. We were discussing

    00:24:54
    a couple of days ago, and that's the, um, I'm going to go on a

    00:24:58
    little rant now, um, assumption and, uh, Dougal, Windsor Wilson

    00:25:04
    on Facebook. He asks about assumptions as well. And the

    00:25:07
    assumptions from the guests there that that dive guide is going to

    00:25:10
    do everything for them. It is my pet hate that people expect a

    00:25:15
    dive pro to look after them on the boat, under the water. If

    00:25:20
    there's any emergencies, the diaper is going to sort it out.

    00:25:22
    And then if anything goes wrong, the dive bros, asphalt and all of

    00:25:28
    this stuff, and I don't want to rent too much. All of this stuff

    00:25:31
    is in my opinion, what you are trying to get clarification on

    00:25:37
    for the world and get it set straight, where everyone

    00:25:40
    everyone's in their own little box, everyone works as a team.

    00:25:43
    Everyone knows how everything should and does happen. And then

    00:25:47
    we've got clarity, hopefully.

    00:25:50
    Gareth: Yeah. So, you know, going right back to, where does the

    00:25:54
    system begin if you think about where those divers have got those

    00:26:00
    assumptions and those behaviors from is when they would have been

    00:26:04
    learned to dive and as guests, they will have been given the

    00:26:09
    minimum amount of instruction time, um, to set up their gear.

    00:26:16
    It would have been demoed, and then they would have been, you

    00:26:20
    know, stuffed would have been done for them. Tick, you've done

    00:26:22
    that skill. You've put your reg on the cylinder, you put your BC

    00:26:26
    on the cylinder, right? Done. You've demonstrated you can do

    00:26:30
    that skill. Now we've got people who will do that for you. So all

    00:26:33
    you need to do is pitch up, listen to some lectures, you

    00:26:36
    know, again, sweeping generalizations, listen to some

    00:26:39
    lectures, watch some videos, get on the boat, go out to the dive

    00:26:43
    site. And, you know, you get fed and watered and treated nicely.

    00:26:47
    You get kitted up, people help you with, with what's going on.

    00:26:51
    And then you jump in and somebody is going to shepherd you. And so,

    00:26:54
    you know, a lot of that, that initial diver training and

    00:26:58
    development, you will have an instructor with you, or you have

    00:27:01
    a guide with your dive master with you. And there isn't the

    00:27:05
    clarity that says you are responsible for your activities.

    00:27:11
    I'm paying you a shed load of money to take me diving. Then I'm

    00:27:15
    taking you to the dive site and you have that. So there is this

    00:27:20
    looking at, how does it make sense for somebody write it? I'm

    00:27:24
    going to say the sharp end as a term from the safety world, the

    00:27:27
    person who's right at the coalface, you know, doing stuff,

    00:27:31
    how does it make sense for them to do what they did? Well, if you

    00:27:33
    look back at their experiential journey and, and how they

    00:27:37
    developed and, and how they got to where they are, that's, that's

    00:27:41
    why they behave the way they do and why?

    00:27:44
    Matt: Well, I've got to pick on you. You did say it's a sweeping

    00:27:47
    statement. It is a big sweeping statement because there's a lot

    00:27:50
    of instructors out there that are very, very good and very

    00:27:53
    meticulous at what they do. But over time you add in skill fade

    00:27:58
    and the ignorance of, you know, future guests and liverboards,

    00:28:03
    and, and, you know, more lackadaisical dive professionals,

    00:28:07
    then yeah, it will creep in, but I just wanted to make sure we

    00:28:11
    don't get shot down in flames there that all professionals.

    00:28:15
    Gareth: Yeah. And so, yeah, I totally agree. And there are lots

    00:28:20
    of professionals out there, and actually we only hear about the

    00:28:24
    negative outcomes that are there. They, you know, they have a, uh,

    00:28:29
    a disproportional effect to our understanding, and that's a

    00:28:33
    cognitive bias. You know, we have a recall or a recency effect

    00:28:37
    where if something happens and it's got emotional, significant,

    00:28:41
    emotional, um, baggage associated with it, we'll be able to recall

    00:28:45
    it more easily. And, you know, going back to defending the

    00:28:49
    organizations, numerically, statistically diving is pretty

    00:28:54
    safe. You've probably got more chance of being killed or injured

    00:28:57
    driving to the dive site than you do on the dive. Now that doesn't

    00:29:03
    mean we shouldn't improve what goes on in diving, but if you

    00:29:07
    look at it from an organizational point of view of how much risk

    00:29:11
    are we willing to tolerate? Well, that's a, that's a sound number.

    00:29:16
    Now, you won't get any of the organizations to tell you what

    00:29:19
    that, uh, you know, as low as reasonably practicable number is

    00:29:24
    because that would be, you know, commercial, reputational, suicide

    00:29:27
    to say, yes, we're happy with a fatality rate of X, uh, in, in

    00:29:32
    those sectors. And to be honest, it's not our problem. We've given

    00:29:36
    them the standards off they go. Um, so, you know, we go back to

    00:29:41
    transparency, risk management again. Yeah.

    00:29:44
    Matt: Now, um, I know you've had a struggle all the way along the

    00:29:48
    journey so far bringing this into the dive industry, but I've got

    00:29:51
    to ask when you released the book, you must have seen quite a

    00:29:55
    significant upturn of interest. It seems to explode when you, uh,

    00:30:01
    when you released that book.

    00:30:04
    Gareth: Yeah. And so I'd been struggling. So I suppose the

    00:30:07
    journey started in 2010 11, where I wrote a white paper looking

    00:30:15
    about diving incident reporting and, um, safety management in the

    00:30:20
    UK diving industry. And, and it went down like a bit of a lead

    00:30:23
    balloon. Um, and shortly after that, I started a PhD part-time

    00:30:28
    self funded PhD. Um, and the struggle there was, nobody was

    00:30:35
    really interested in what I was doing. My goal was to try and

    00:30:40
    produce something like a, um, something that happens in

    00:30:43
    aviation, where they've got a structure, which looks at

    00:30:45
    organizational failures, supervisory failures, individual

    00:30:50
    failures, where we set ourselves up. So we're tired, or we're not

    00:30:52
    prepared or things like, and then there's the act of failure. So we

    00:30:55
    make a slip or a mistake or a lapse, or we, we break a rule. So

    00:31:00
    that went on for about six years. And in the end I stopped doing it

    00:31:04
    because I was spending money. I wasn't getting anywhere, but in

    00:31:07
    January, 2016, I ran the first face-to-face training program

    00:31:15
    that developed, um, as a pilot that went well, another one in

    00:31:18
    February, another one in April. And then somebody said, well, why

    00:31:22
    don't you do the pre-learning that's there and set it up as a

    00:31:25
    standalone course. And I got some traction there as people doing

    00:31:29
    online learning and got some really positive feedback from

    00:31:32
    people saying, look, this stuff is, you know, should be in the

    00:31:35
    training materials. And it wasn't until probably the spring of 18

    00:31:41
    where I was running a face-to-face class. And somebody

    00:31:44
    had said, why don't you write a book about this? Because people

    00:31:47
    will consume it as a book rather than doing online materials. So I

    00:31:52
    had thought about that. So then they spent the next probably from

    00:31:56
    the summer four or five months in, in the summer of 18 writing

    00:32:01
    it, and then the next sort of six months getting it edited and

    00:32:06
    turned around and things like that. And I'd spent a fair amount

    00:32:11
    of time trying, you know, three marketing training of how do I

    00:32:15
    market this, because it's a really difficult topic to market

    00:32:19
    because I was trying to do it from a safety perspective. And

    00:32:23
    you never market, um, away from a threat. What you do is you Mark

    00:32:29
    it towards a benefit because it's what people will want, not what

    00:32:34
    people are trying to get away from. Right. Um, so I'd spent a

    00:32:37
    lot of time how to try and market this. So I spent the total end of

    00:32:43
    18 marketing the book and getting the first two chapters out there

    00:32:50
    so people could go on. So I had a pretty big list by the time the

    00:32:56
    book was released in March 19. And I spent a lot of time

    00:33:01
    packaging up and signing books and posting them out. And then it

    00:33:05
    starts getting into the hands of, you know, it's a terrible term

    00:33:09
    influences and not just in the sort of sports diving industry,

    00:33:13
    but in the scientific and the military and the commercial, and

    00:33:17
    actually people in traditional safety as well. We'll pick it up

    00:33:21
    and go, Oh, hang on. This is really good. And then it starts

    00:33:24
    spreading out. So yeah, the, the rise was, was, was really nice to

    00:33:30
    see because it's like, yes, there is, there is value being created

    00:33:34
    out there. Yeah. What I write in the books now, though, is

    00:33:38
    knowledge is not enough. We must apply willing is not enough. We

    00:33:42
    must do. Um, and, and it's attributed to Bruce leave that

    00:33:46
    came from God before that we'll go to, um, and you know, it's

    00:33:51
    great. I read this now, do something with it. I mean, that

    00:33:56
    means I have to change what I change to change requires a bit

    00:34:00
    of effort and energy and things like that. But starting to get

    00:34:03
    people to talk about things is it's been huge benefit.

    00:34:07
    Matt: Yeah. And is it, um, is the way forward to, um, introduce

    00:34:13
    human factors to the newer divers, the younger divers, the

    00:34:17
    ones that are more accepted, uh, that more, they're more keen to,

    00:34:24
    to absorb the information that's going to help them progress

    00:34:28
    rather than the, the ones that might be stuck in their ways and

    00:34:31
    find it difficult to introduce that change.

    00:34:35
    Gareth: Um, so actually I've now got five other instructors who

    00:34:39
    are, so it's not just me. I've got, um, I've got two in the

    00:34:43
    States or two in Canada at the moment. Um, I got one in Belgium

    00:34:47
    Holland, I've got one in Egypt and, um, our traveler and one of

    00:34:54
    the UAE. So they, they do some of that sort of the sharing site.

    00:34:59
    And actually they're all with the exception of one, they're all

    00:35:02
    diving instructors. So they give me ideas of where this could fit

    00:35:07
    in. So there is a, uh, a multi-pronged approach. One is to

    00:35:12
    go in and try and simplify it at the, um, probably the, the rescue

    00:35:19
    diver dive master level, um, to try and get some interest there,

    00:35:24
    to get some interest at the, in the se tech, curious, those

    00:35:29
    people are sitting there going right, what what's tech diving

    00:35:31
    about. Um, and so we're talking about kit and depth and insight,

    00:35:36
    actually, a lot of it's about in your head, uh, and, and how to

    00:35:39
    make more effective decisions and how to recognize that you're

    00:35:43
    going to expose yourself to greater risk and an understanding

    00:35:47
    and practicing the stuff that's in the book helps mitigate and

    00:35:51
    control some of those. And then the other bit is going in at the

    00:35:55
    sort of experienced instructors. Again, we go back to the

    00:36:00
    influencer term to get them to start even just using the

    00:36:05
    language. Once we start changing words, we can change worlds. And

    00:36:10
    that's not my quote. That's somebody else's, I forgot it's

    00:36:13
    shrunk, but is you, you change the language. Um, and people will

    00:36:18
    start changing their own behaviors accordingly. Um, and

    00:36:23
    I've seen that probably over the last two or three years, and

    00:36:27
    being in bigger Facebook groups where there's this concept of

    00:36:33
    local rationality, how does it make sense for people to do what

    00:36:37
    they did? And now I see other people posting those same bits or

    00:36:42
    they'll tag me in, Oh, it's great. You know, um, and I'll add

    00:36:46
    a little bit of extra, but the fact that people are now able to

    00:36:51
    gonna say, fight those battles, using stuff that I've given is

    00:36:56
    incredibly rewarding and it will, it will start cascading out, but

    00:37:00
    it's, it's a huge journey to, to go on. Um, and I I'm, I'm, I'm up

    00:37:07
    for it

    00:37:07
    Matt: And it, well, it's, it's not gonna stop growing, is it, I

    00:37:10
    mean, you're, you've, you've mentioned you've got five, um,

    00:37:13
    instructors. Oh yeah. Give him a shout out.

    00:37:20
    Gareth: So there's the five instructors I've got at the

    00:37:22
    moment and there's four in training and waiting for them to

    00:37:25
    sign off. So the five instructors, Guy Shockey who's in

    00:37:28
    Vancouver, there's Helen Pellerin . Who's in Quebec, there's Bart

    00:37:32
    Den Ouden, who's in the Netherlands. And then Jenny Lord

    00:37:36
    in Dahab and Daryl Owen is in the UAE. And I got four others who,

    00:37:41
    and that's Meredith Tanguay who's in Florida. Uh, Chris Tomlin, a

    00:37:45
    UK, uh, Beatrice Rivara in Italy and Mike Mason, who's up in

    00:37:51
    Newcastle. So two weeks ago we were supposed to be running the

    00:37:54
    certifying workshops, but obviously COVID has knocked that

    00:37:59
    on the head. So I'm hoping as soon as we can start traveling, I

    00:38:03
    can get to, uh, to certify them. And then there'll be four more

    00:38:06
    instructors able to, to deliver the materials. Okay.

    00:38:09
    Matt: So we're going to have nine , nine global instructors. That's

    00:38:12
    it, that's a hefty run from when was the book released 2019, was

    00:38:17
    it? And then we've had a year if we can exclude last year because

    00:38:22
    we didn't do anything.

    00:38:23
    Gareth: Well, interestingly, didn't do anything face to face.

    00:38:27
    But to me COVID actually was a bit of a, a blessing in disguise

    00:38:32
    because people were in stuck at home going[inaudible] and I'd

    00:38:36
    already started in 2000 tail end of 2019, delivering a webinar

    00:38:42
    based 10 week program. Um, and since then I've delivered six of

    00:38:48
    those. So there's about 200 people, um, have gone through

    00:38:55
    some training, um, since, you know, since the, by the online

    00:38:59
    webinar basis. Um, so, and they then speak and, uh, I'll give a

    00:39:04
    shout out to Mateas, uh, who's down in Victoria. Um, he's

    00:39:10
    changed the, the culture of his club having come on a course with

    00:39:13
    me last year and gone, ah, this is blow my mind. I can't stop

    00:39:18
    thinking about it. I'm going to take this stuff. And they got rid

    00:39:23
    of the wooden weight belt award within their club, which was

    00:39:27
    about the biggest or most embarrassing screw up. Somebody

    00:39:30
    had done the previous year. And he said, let, just really

    00:39:33
    demeaning. This is, you know, yes, it's funny, but nobody's

    00:39:37
    really happy to receive this. So he stopped that and I said, well

    00:39:42
    , you could still turn it around. You could still issue a prize,

    00:39:45
    but do it for the biggest learning experience of the year

    00:39:49
    when it comes to diving. Um, and now you've, you've recognized the

    00:39:54
    learning that's happening in the club. So really proud of

    00:40:00
    [inaudible]

    00:40:01
    Matt: Victoria as in Australia. Yeah,

    00:40:03
    Gareth: Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. In Melbourne

    00:40:06
    Matt: I'll come and have a dive. I've not dived Melbourne yet. And

    00:40:08
    I keep itching to do it every time I go there. It's just not

    00:40:10
    long enough to be there. Yeah. Itching, my tests. I'll come

    00:40:13
    diving with you and I don't want the wooden belt.

    00:40:20
    Gareth: Well, then you can have the best learning experience that

    00:40:22
    would go positive thing. Yeah.

    00:40:24
    Matt: Yeah. Um, well, as soon as we're talking about Australia and

    00:40:30
    you're obviously in the UK and we've mentioned Canada America on

    00:40:32
    the kind of thing. Um, one thing I've noticed with, with work in a

    00:40:35
    dive in, in various locations around the world now is that when

    00:40:40
    you go to particular countries, they have a different kind of

    00:40:44
    take on how you should be diving now, by that, I mean, um,

    00:40:50
    Thailand, some people will moan about it, say it's bit blahzay.

    00:40:55
    Well, it's not, um, those places that are, uh, very dense

    00:41:00
    population of people going through basic training, the

    00:41:04
    courses tend to be run quite tight because they've got to be

    00:41:08
    up to standard with everyone else who's producing. Um, conversely

    00:41:13
    you come to Australia and, um, I was, he's a pretty laid back and,

    00:41:18
    you know, take everything in stride. Um, and I find it quite

    00:41:22
    shocking to see how many people go solo dive in just off the

    00:41:26
    shoreline air, um, with no redundant as supplies. And it

    00:41:31
    just seems to be the norm. I find that quite frightening, but I

    00:41:38
    think there's gotta be a place there for, I think we mentioned

    00:41:41
    it, the what'd you call it the other day called culture or

    00:41:43
    cultural differences, cultural awareness yet, have you, have you

    00:41:47
    experienced much of that so far going through the training and

    00:41:49
    the, the guys that you've been doing these courses with?

    00:41:53
    Gareth: Not necessarily because there are self-selecting audience

    00:42:00
    that, that comes on the, the training programs anyway, so that

    00:42:04
    then they're the early adopters. So the people who see that, the

    00:42:07
    benefit of self-development, um, what I have seen is, um, a little

    00:42:17
    bit about, I haven't done much out in the, in, you know, I've

    00:42:21
    done some training in New Zealand and Australia, I've done one

    00:42:24
    session in Bali, but they were all sort of ex-pats that are,

    00:42:28
    were in Bali. So they weren't really indicative of the culture

    00:42:33
    that's there. Um, in, in Europe, there are certainly different, um

    00:42:39
    , behaviors between sort of countries. Um, so it's certainly

    00:42:46
    an area that needs to be looked at in terms of incidents, but I

    00:42:50
    don't think I haven't really encountered it myself. Now, what

    00:42:54
    I did find interesting were your comment about Thailand. So here's

    00:42:57
    a cognitive bias straight away is that my, my perception of

    00:43:02
    learning to dive out in Thailand is not great because it's about

    00:43:07
    getting people through the door as quickly as possible. And the

    00:43:10
    driving factor is more about money than quality because of the

    00:43:16
    clientele that you're likely to be training in the day. They want

    00:43:20
    a bucket ticket, you know, bucket list ticket that says done

    00:43:23
    diving, move on. Yeah, yeah. And the, you know, the, the w I don't

    00:43:32
    know whether or not your use of the word tight meant tight as

    00:43:35
    they enter the high quality and they were having to compete, or

    00:43:38
    whether or not they were tight because they were running back to

    00:43:40
    back courses. And so they couldn't, um, th there's no flex

    00:43:45
    for somebody who's not quite good enough to have some extra dives,

    00:43:50
    but I find sign off and off you go. Um, so yeah, there is a huge

    00:43:56
    amount that that needs to be taken into account in culture. So

    00:43:59
    go back to your book, rumble, rumble, rumble, go back to your

    00:44:01
    point that solar dive in Australia, look at the system and

    00:44:05
    , and the, how the, the local culture will change risk

    00:44:10
    perceptions, and what can be done to do that. So if you know that

    00:44:17
    something is lacking in an output where you need to change what the

    00:44:23
    input is. So it's that the instructors, if they're not happy

    00:44:27
    about people solo diving, because that's the norm. Well, actually

    00:44:31
    there needs to be more emphasis on teamwork and shared mental

    00:44:35
    models and not relying, but working together as a team during

    00:44:40
    the training program, because if it's not emphasized, then most

    00:44:44
    courses are individuals who come together as a group learn, and

    00:44:49
    they go off, they don't interact and operate together as a team,

    00:44:53
    and you can do that to recreation level. It just requires the

    00:44:56
    instructor to up their game and up their knowledge and their

    00:44:59
    skills to be able to teach that. So, um, and you know, the fact

    00:45:05
    that they don't take redundant air supplies with them. Well, if

    00:45:08
    that's not something that's been emphasized or taught or brought

    00:45:12
    up in training, don't be surprised that people don't do it

    00:45:16
    outside of the training because you know, and their argument,

    00:45:20
    well, they should know about these risks. They can learn from

    00:45:23
    others. Well, then we get into the social conformance piece.

    00:45:26
    Well, everybody else is diving without redundant air. Why do I

    00:45:31
    need to, because they're not all dropping like flies, therefore it

    00:45:35
    must be safe. So these are all bits of the human factors, jigsaw

    00:45:40
    , jigsaw puzzle that needs to be taken into account. Oh, it's huge

    00:45:47
    . It's huge. And I think this is, you know, the human factors is,

    00:45:52
    is general and approach and specific in application. And by

    00:45:56
    that, I mean, cognitive biases, social interactions, the way we

    00:46:00
    make decisions, Lehman make communications. There's a huge

    00:46:04
    body of research that explains how this works, but how to create

    00:46:08
    change at an individual level or a team level or a dive center

    00:46:12
    level has to be specific. So I I'm much better at answering

    00:46:18
    specific problem type questions than writing something generic

    00:46:23
    because you write something generic people go that doesn't

    00:46:26
    apply to me. That doesn't apply to me. That's another bias that

    00:46:29
    we have, you know, that they're different to me. So it doesn't

    00:46:33
    apply to me well, hanging on it. Why is it any different? But I

    00:46:37
    have got examples of being in Southeast Asia where authority,

    00:46:43
    or, or the social culture, which is normally termed as a sort of

    00:46:46
    authority gradient where a junior diver or an experienced diver

    00:46:50
    won't question, a more senior person. Yeah. But it's not as

    00:46:54
    simple as just this seniority piece. It's about respect. And we

    00:47:01
    are a family that actually we're going to, we wouldn't question

    00:47:06
    our fathers or uncles, or, you know, the patriarch set up

    00:47:11
    because they might give me something later on. And so you

    00:47:16
    get to be in situations. And I know instructors who operate out

    00:47:19
    there where they will, um, fail something on the leader, the team

    00:47:24
    leader, the dive is going on and the rest of the team, or they

    00:47:27
    will get the leader to make a mistake. And the rest of the team

    00:47:30
    will just sit there and not question or challenge what's

    00:47:33
    going on. And so there's, there's a huge learning that's needed for

    00:47:37
    the instructors to understand these behaviors and come up with

    00:47:42
    strategies to inform their students that says, look, once

    00:47:46
    you're out of the, the cover and the protection of an

    00:47:50
    instructional setting, you're out on your own. And that means that

    00:47:55
    you have to be aware of these. And if things do go wrong, you

    00:47:58
    have to say something before it becomes catastrophic. So it's,

    00:48:03
    yeah, it's a, it's a huge jigsaw puzzle.

    00:48:06
    Matt: Yeah. Yeah. Uh, how much that man, I'm sitting here

    00:48:08
    listening to you and just thinking back over what we've

    00:48:11
    discussed over the last, however long, and it's an awkward topic.

    00:48:16
    I mean, we've got to say it is an awkward topic to talk about. And

    00:48:19
    especially, I mean, I'm, I'm, I'm not forwarding, I'm not shy in

    00:48:23
    coming forward and speaking what I want to speak. Um, but I found

    00:48:28
    myself second, you know, thinking twice thinking before I speak,

    00:48:33
    which is not usually me. Um, so I think I can now understand a

    00:48:39
    little bit more why it takes 10 weeks of webinars to get this

    00:48:43
    training across because you've got some, some massive voids to

    00:48:47
    cross. And so a lot of barriers to break down for this to be a

    00:48:52
    success.

    00:48:54
    Gareth: Oh, totally. And, you know, I look at where aviation,

    00:48:58
    you know, started in the eighties because they were blaming pilots

    00:49:02
    for pilot error, sticking the aircraft in the ground because

    00:49:05
    they were not paying attention or miscommunicating and ropes wrong

    00:49:10
    selections, but ultimately boiled down to pilot error. And it

    00:49:13
    wasn't until they started looking at the cockpit voice reporters

    00:49:16
    and the flight data recorders. And they said, well, hang on a

    00:49:19
    minute. They, they, there was an awareness of what was going on,

    00:49:22
    but they were unable to share that picture amongst the rest of

    00:49:26
    the crew. And when they did, it was potentially too late. And

    00:49:29
    then they start looking at, well, hang on with it. The errors

    00:49:32
    didn't just happen in the cockpit. They would have been

    00:49:36
    developed from the aircraft design or air traffic controls,

    00:49:39
    design, or airport design, and start looking further back up. So

    00:49:43
    you start taking a systems view about what's going on. So even

    00:49:47
    though aviation has been doing this for 40 plus years, 50 years

    00:49:51
    or so, they still have issues and they still have, you know,

    00:49:56
    aircraft crashes, they still have miscommunication issues, all of

    00:50:00
    those things. And that's an incredibly regulated industry.

    00:50:04
    Healthcare has been doing it for probably about 15 years and they

    00:50:08
    really struggle, um, because of the dynamic environment, the

    00:50:12
    pressures and the social cultural issues that exist in, in a

    00:50:15
    healthcare environment. Um, and in the UK, they're starting to

    00:50:19
    bring some formal structure to human factors into the clinical

    00:50:24
    environment based on work by a guy called Martin Bromley. Um,

    00:50:30
    who's formed the clinical human factors group as a way of trying

    00:50:33
    to get that. And there's now governmental support to, to what

    00:50:35
    they're doing and, and the colleges that surgeons needs,

    00:50:38
    tests, dentists, whatever. And now starting to put stuff

    00:50:41
    together, um, in the diving industry, it's, it's me and

    00:50:46
    abandon followers who are going, this is a good idea. We need to

    00:50:49
    do it. Um, and, and I get the resistance there. Aren't dead

    00:50:53
    bodies lying up. Therefore it must be okay.

    00:50:57
    Matt: Yeah. Yeah. Well, I didn't say right. I suppose I didn't

    00:51:01
    right at the start of this bloody episode, to be honest, Eva,

    00:51:05
    you're 25 years in the air force. You're actually a navigator,

    00:51:08
    wouldn't you? Yeah.

    00:51:10
    Gareth: Yeah. Hercules navigator in a multi-crew environment and

    00:51:13
    then went on and did a master's in aerospace systems, which is

    00:51:17
    where my knowledge of human factors and sort of the deeper

    00:51:21
    knowledge. And that's when I sort of started digging deeper and

    00:51:24
    then went into flight trials, um, with Airbus. So picked up some

    00:51:29
    human factors stuff there, then worked in research and

    00:51:32
    development and then worked in procurement and systems

    00:51:34
    engineering. So very broad view of the world. And it was during

    00:51:39
    the, the latter sort of five years of my time in the air

    00:51:41
    force. That's not in PhD. Um, so yeah, huge breadth.

    00:51:48
    Matt: I'll just get a psych, a anyone, any of the divers that

    00:51:50
    are out there. Thank you. I'm not gonna listen to this fellow. He's

    00:51:52
    not even, he's not even a professional. He's not even an

    00:51:53
    instructor. Well, I think you kind of top it for, um, you know,

    00:51:57
    having experienced in a structured, uh, work environment

    00:52:01
    and how teamwork comes together.

    00:52:04
    Gareth: Yeah. And so, yeah, and from the diving side of the

    00:52:09
    majority of my training has gone through gue. Um, so I did

    00:52:14
    fundamentals in 2006. Uh, we're only had about 40 dives to my

    00:52:21
    name. So I was, I was really lucky that I didn't have to

    00:52:24
    unlearn a bunch of stuff. Um, and then since then, um, I've

    00:52:29
    probably got about 800 dives, uh , certified at the highest levels

    00:52:33
    to, you know, my highest levels of GV take two, which is, uh, an

    00:52:37
    advanced tronics course and, uh, JJ rebreather, which I'm going to

    00:52:43
    get recertified on the end of may , um, to get back up to speed on

    00:52:48
    that. So, but I know there was a question about rebreathers.

    00:52:52
    Matt: Yeah. That was, um, uh, Lisa, Lisa, Marie. Yeah. Um, what

    00:52:58
    are your thoughts on rebreathers then? That was a, that's a whole

    00:53:01
    new,

    00:53:04
    Gareth: My view on rebreathers. Um, are they safe? Are they

    00:53:08
    unsafe? Uh, a piece of equipment is not unsafe in of itself. And

    00:53:15
    it's a simple example is a hairdryer could be safe. It's not

    00:53:20
    particularly safe. You sit in a bath and put the hairdryer in the

    00:53:23
    water with you. Um, and, and so it's this need to look at a

    00:53:28
    system again. So rebreathers have been designed to the level that

    00:53:35
    the, um, the market will support. And by that, I mean, is it costs

    00:53:42
    manufacturers money to design builds, certify, and they've got

    00:53:46
    to recoup that money. And then they've got to make a profit.

    00:53:49
    Otherwise they're not a valid, sustainable business. So the

    00:53:54
    diving community won't pay much more than they pay or ready, um,

    00:54:01
    for, for what's there. So in terms of maturity and equipment

    00:54:05
    set, it's probably, you know, there are little nuances, but

    00:54:08
    it's probably about as mature as it's going to get. Then we look

    00:54:13
    at the other pieces of the system and that's the training agencies,

    00:54:16
    the instructors and the divers themselves, um, and how they all

    00:54:22
    come together is how to create a safe diving, converter, calm, a

    00:54:26
    safe diving operation on a rebreather and recognize that

    00:54:32
    it's working together that creates safety, not a reboot.

    00:54:38
    Rebreather is unsafe. The difficulty is that there is,

    00:54:42
    again, there is no formal training that goes into agency

    00:54:45
    training materials that talk about human fallibility and

    00:54:49
    cognitive biases, and why checklists are designed the way

    00:54:53
    they are. They could probably be improved, um, to make them, you

    00:54:57
    know, to have less friction, um, to be in a situation that you

    00:55:02
    operate as a team. And if one of the team isn't using a checklist

    00:55:09
    that you've created the environment that actually, if I'm

    00:55:11
    not using a checklist, I expect you to call me out. And if you

    00:55:15
    are not using one, I'm going to call you out. And there is no,

    00:55:19
    there's nothing wrong with that, but it's, it's, it's not easy

    00:55:24
    because those, those soft bits are not easy to measure. Um, it's

    00:55:30
    much easier to measure simple compliance when you're delivering

    00:55:33
    a course, but that doesn't necessarily help you, um, develop

    00:55:38
    competencies and attitudes. And the, the final piece then is the

    00:55:43
    expectation that if you haven't read, reached a standard, then

    00:55:47
    you don't get a certification. Now I know some agencies put that

    00:55:52
    in the hands of the instructor that says, are they, have, they

    00:55:56
    got the right attitude to dive this equipment? If not, then you

    00:55:59
    can refuse certification. That has to be explained really

    00:56:04
    clearly before the course starts, because otherwise you're going to

    00:56:08
    end up with a whole world of hurt that says, hang in there. I

    00:56:11
    matched all the skills and it's just your opinion that I'm not

    00:56:15
    safe. And so, you know, you end up with conflict there. Yeah. So

    00:56:20
    to answer the question, Lisa, my view is they are a valid too, and

    00:56:24
    they're potentially safer than open circuit at certain depths.

    00:56:29
    Um, how have you also need to train in shallower debts to be

    00:56:32
    able to go to the deeper depths, to, to be competent when things

    00:56:36
    go wrong and you also need to have the attitude that says this

    00:56:40
    thing can fail. I need to know what it's doing all the time, and

    00:56:44
    I can resolve those failures. And that means I need to go and

    00:56:47
    practice them. And there's nothing wrong with doing drills

    00:56:51
    in a quarry in the shallows to make sure that you're competent

    00:56:55
    to deal with almost no notice failures, because those failures,

    00:57:00
    if we knew they were going to come, we'd do something about

    00:57:03
    them.

    00:57:04
    Matt: For sure. I mean, it's gotta be second nature. And the

    00:57:06
    only way you're gonna be able to do that is through training.

    00:57:10
    Gareth: Yeah. W with effective feedback. Yeah.

    00:57:12
    Matt: Yeah. Happy days we've been going on for quite some time now.

    00:57:18
    So it must be time for your breakfast and time for me to have

    00:57:21
    a beer. So it's been an absolute pleasure mate. How can people

    00:57:24
    just get in touch with, with you and where can they find you

    00:57:27
    online? We'll put them in the show notes as well, but give them

    00:57:29
    a call.

    00:57:29
    Gareth: Yeah. So the easiest way is the human diver.com. Um, and,

    00:57:35
    uh, that there's a contact page there that, that sends out a form

    00:57:38
    through to me. Um, so that that's the easiest bit. There's a

    00:57:42
    Facebook page as well, or a Facebook group rather we've got

    00:57:46
    about six and a half thousand people in which if you just, uh,

    00:57:49
    searching Facebook for human factors in diving, then you will

    00:57:53
    , uh, you'll find that. And I'd really recommend anybody who

    00:57:58
    wants to learn more about human factors in a, in a 30 minute

    00:58:04
    documentary is to go onto the human diver website, go to the

    00:58:08
    top and look at if only click the link there and watch a

    00:58:12
    documentary, which will bring a tear to some people's eyes,

    00:58:17
    because it deals with a fatality. And it deals with raw emotion

    00:58:20
    that the dive team that lost a member. And it's told the story

    00:58:25
    is told through a lens of human factors and adjust culture, which

    00:58:28
    is about understanding how it made sense for somebody to do

    00:58:32
    what they did. There are also some additional notes. So if

    00:58:35
    you're inclined to take this further, there is a guide that

    00:58:39
    explains the event in more details and also teaches you how

    00:58:42
    to run a workshop on how to learn more about, or learn from, um,

    00:58:50
    the, uh, the documentary, if only, and you can get the book

    00:58:53
    from that from the website as well, or from Amazon.

    00:58:56
    Matt: Well, we'll put it all in the show notes. If you want to,

    00:58:58
    if you want to put a link to this on your website, feel free and

    00:59:01
    people can listen to it. I haven't already, and I'll put a

    00:59:03
    few links in for that. Um, if only DACA. Yeah. I'll put that

    00:59:07
    into the show notes as well. So they've got direct link to you

    00:59:09
    there. Um, Gareth has been awesome. Um, let's do it again,

    00:59:14
    some point, especially with all these new instructors that are

    00:59:16
    coming through, we can put something together and, yeah.

    00:59:21
    Gareth: Excellent. Thanks very much, Matt, and, uh, have fun to

    00:59:23
    everybody. Thanks so much. Thanks very much.

    00:59:26
    Matt: Uh, goodbye. Everybody podcast for the inquisitive diver

    00:59:32
    .

    Gareth Lock,Under Pressure,The Human Diver,

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