tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4961986629945631946.post-21178501251086282952007-06-18T06:35:00.000-07:002007-06-18T06:37:05.370-07:00Deep Water Adventure - scuba diving and multiple sclerosisWATER DOESN'T just keep people cool, water beats gravity. Supported by water, actions that require great effort on land become easier. This is the basis for therapeutic aquatics, in which people get into a pool to stretch and strengthen parts of the body that are underused or stressed because of disabilities. But it also means--with ordinary equipment and a little training--the underwater wilderness is extraordinarily accessible. The woman in the picture at right is quadriplegic. She has no voluntary control over anything below the neck, yet with the help of a dive buddy trained by the Handicapped Scuba Association International, she swims freely.<br /><p> Jeanne Megel of Colorado Springs not only dives on her own, she swims with the sharks. "The trick is stretching your limits, frequently but gently," she wrote to InsideMS.</p> <p> "When I was diagnosed 15 years ago, what I heard most was, `You can't do that, you have MS.' For several years, I sat at home, rested, and took care of myself. The better care I took, the more depressed I became.</p> <p> "Then I took up scuba diving. After getting my open water certification, I asked my doctor to sign a release for me to take the advanced class.</p> <p> "`You can't dive, you have MS,' was the reply. `But I've already certified!' I said. He signed the letter. One year later I had certified as a professional dive master.</p> <p> "I didn't bother to ask my doctor about the course in shark feeding. I just went. I spent a week feeding sharks in the Caribbean as part of an environmental education program, and now I teach volunteer classes on sharks and reef ecology."</p>Gameshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14861068317417793607noreply@blogger.com