Actress Photos Actress Cristina Zenato HD Photos and Wallpapers December 2023 By GethuCinema Admin December 15, 2023 Related Posts Actress Cristina Zenato HD Photos and Wallpapers June 2024 Actress Cristina Zenato HD Photos and Wallpapers May 2024 Actress Cristina Zenato HD Photos and Wallpapers April 2024 Actress Cristina Zenato HD Photos and Wallpapers March 2024 Actress Cristina Zenato HD Photos and Wallpapers January 2024 Share This Post FacebookTwitterPinterestWhatsAppReddItTelegram Not one hook removal is like the other one; there are differences in where the hooks is lodged, how it pierce through the skin and which shark is carrying it. When Peggy showed up with three hooks in one place I went to work to remove the most prominent one and also the trickiest that prevents access to the other two. The hook had come through her cheek, showing both the point and the bard. I decide the best way to remove it was to rotate it more forward and slide the eyelet through the open wound. Being a new hook, the skin around the wound was still very tough and not infected, so after turning the hook, it took a couple of attempts to pull it out, but it finally gave in. No matter how many times I witness this behavior, it is always so amazing that the shark keeps coming back allowing me to try over and over again; of course they can only stay for a few seconds, as nature tells them to run away from pain, but there is for sure a thought process of coming back to let me try numerous times. Peggy is now completely hook free. While working on her, a new one, we have not yet named, but seen before, showed up with a double hook and after a few dives and attempts she is also hook free, but that’s for another story. Video and support by the amazing @kewinlorenzen with @isotta_underwater_housings @neptunic_com @waterproofinternational @peopleofthewater Reflections from the deck. I have recenly posted about being authentic and refusing to use filters on social media. There were so many beautiful, supportive comments and couple of not so nice. I am not affected by them but they brought up a few thoughts about the way people are acting and interacting on these platforms. The comments can be from wrinkles on my face, to the size of my arms, none of which affects me anymore. I stare at them from a distance; I feel for those who utter those words and know that they are projecting their personal hurt onto others. It makes me worry how these comments could affect someone else, make them feel less than. What if the receiving end is a young mind, someone already overwhelmed by the staggering amount of fake, filtered, even AI created lives, which elevate expectations to a perfection that is not real and as such unattainable? I responded that “Spreading kindness is better than using the power to connect trying to hurt someone; my skin tells the story of a beautiful and fully lived life, each line the memory of something special. Next time you are on the keyboard, think how you can support someone instead of trying to tear them down.” Then my thoughts went further. Aging is a privilege, it is a gift many have not been granted. I lost my best friend when we were 29 years old. My friend, and many others in my life have not had this opportunity to grow gray hair, sport soft skin, show wrinkly smiles and experience loss of hearing (yes that too 😂) Aging is not something we should stop, slow down or even attempt to reverse, aging is the gift living is giving us. It goes beyond the filters of an artificial world and enters the realms of what we have been fed forever and ever, in terms of how we are supposed to look, how we are supposed to slow down and reduce a natural process, how if we do not do it we are letting ourselves go. So if there is something we can do when we are out there, when we are being bombarded by information and at times negativity is to remain true to ourselves and when in doubt spread some kindness, it comes cheap and easy to distribute.. Image @kewinlorenzen “You will never make a difference,” said the old man. “But I made it for that one,” replied the young person – from the Starfish Story Every day, we are bombarded and overwhelmed with news about the negative course our planet and the environment are taking. We watch most of the time helpless at the, literally, rivers of plastic choking our streams, reversing into the ocean, killing all animals indiscriminately. We hear about these pollutants returning to us, into our plates and drinking water. We watch as truckloads of garbage and abandoned goods are taken away. Remember, when we throw something away, it doesn’t go to a magic place called “away. “ It goes somewhere else on this planet. We feel that anything we do won’t make much of an impact. Each of us has the power to be the change and inspire it in others. We do not have to kill ourselves by trying to do everything all the time. It is impossible to fight an uphill battle constantly, but each day, we can select actions that have a positive outcome right in the place where we are, in the moment we are living. As I have said before, I cannot save all the sharks in the world nor pick up all the plastic on the beach where we were yesterday. Still, I will pick up as much as I can fit in the car and, through that action, spare a bird, a turtle, or a shark from becoming entangled, eating the incorrect food, or suffering because of our actions. Beach clean up with @kewinlorenzen Wearing my favorite brand @fourthelementdive biking made from recycled nylong. Today I am reposting this incredible capture by @kewinlorenzen I saw the picture as soon as he took it but the more I look at it, the more it makes me think. 👉 Of the many years passed diving and observing creatures, the behavior, and choice, of this remora is incredible on so many levels. 👉To find safety in the mouth of the world’s second largest predatory shark. 👉to benefit not only from the protection but as a source of food while remaining safe 💯 Additionally, for me, as a perfect example of how sharks are not empty brains swimming around always looking to chomp down on something (like many still tell me that sharks are) but thinking creatures with have a role to play and a connection and interaction with the ecosystem they belong to. to find safety in the mouth of the world’s second largest predatory shark. 👇Kewin’s original post ・・・ Who’s in there? While taking macro images of the tiger sharks, I noticed this remora happily resting inside the mouth of Maria, one of the biggest tiger sharks on the site. Remoras are usually found hitch hiking on sharks, as they have a mutualism symbiotic relationship. The remora keeps the shark clean from parasites, dead skin, while feeding on food scraps from the tigers meals. You can imagine my surprise when I saw the remora sitting comfortably inside and at a later time swimming outside and resuming a more traditional position. @isotta_underwater_housings @waterproofinternational @fourthelementdive “Authentic” Merriam-Webster word of the year for 2023 is “authentic.” In an age of deepfakes, post-truth, and artificial intelligence, when full accounts are made up by virtual people who live artificially created lives, when we question authenticity, we value it even more. I decided a long time ago that my images and posts would be authentic, representing my life and how I look, with no filters, no smoothing of lines, and no changes in who I am and what I do. My images come with shadows, wrinkles, and the rest, my body comes in its natural shape, in the moment, with messy hair, and unchecked blemishes. Authenticity is missing from our lives, and we crave it now more than ever. I hope more will join in showing their true selves, sharing their unfiltered faces, and reducing comparisons with an unattainable reality to live lighter lives. Celebrating authenticity with these images wearing the designs from @goghjewelrydesign dear friend, and sea sister in the @wdhof. Szilvia makes her pieces one by one and promotes them using images of friends and clients of all ages and looks wearing them; she never uses models. When I sent her the images of me wearing her pieces, I told her, “ They come with shadows, wrinkles, and the rest,” she replied, “ That is how I want them, authentic. “ Use code SHARMOM for 20% off at check out at https://goghjewelrydesign.com Image by @kewinlorenzen What do we do when after only one week absence we come back to Half-Baked with two hooks (collected between December 2nd and 3rd), Peggy with three (she had only one on the 24th of November) and Nacho still with her one hook through the gills (that one is a very difficult and dangerous one to try to remove), with Crook showing a short line coming out of her mouth and looking all scratched up and beat up (looks like might have been pulled super close to the fishing boat to cut the line.)? If we let the negative of this world affect us, it could be very disheartening. Instead I went to work, because I want to make a difference where I have the power to help. I was able to remove two hooks, one from Half-Baked, one from Peggy, when a new small girl showed up with a double hook and a long line. She will take some time to approach but I will try again today. When we think we cannot make a difference we need to remember we can always make a difference for that one. As I usually say: one small action is better than no big action. @neptunic_com @peopleofthewater With @kewinlorenzen Neptunic “I am a galaxy I am 450 million years old I have been here before your time, before the time of the trees I have swam around Pangea and I have shared the oceans with ancient dinosaurs, And yet, now, I am at risk, my survival is threatened by your commercial and recreational fishing pressures, your impact on the seabed and our preys, and damage and loss from your coastal development and marine pollution I am a galaxy and I am trying to survive” – Cristina Zenato Close up image of Tiger Shark eye Maria, at Tiger Beach, Grand Bahama Island by @kewinlorenzen @isotta_underwater_housings In our small world of shark lovers we do not realize how much the word Shark creates a fearful reaction in most of the public. And even when we post videos of our time with different species, showing how they swim among us and interact with us we are still met with incredulity. One of the hardest jobs for me is to make people understand that what we experience is the reality of diving with sharks, not what is created by an imagination fueled by incorrect and hyped up information. Join @kewinlorenzen and I on our liveaboard trips to learn more about sharks, dive with them, experience their presence and surface with a new understanding of the word “shark” Each trip we take only six guests for a private and dedicated experience; filled with lots of different dives and encounters with up to seven species of sharks, we talk sharks, conservation and while I provide educational presentations, Kewin captures images and videos of our experiences above and below the water, we send at the end of the trip. Only a few spots left for 2024 and 2025. 2024 at $5714 per person January 16-26 one male spot left March 1-11 one female and one male spots left (separate cabins) November 17-27 (fully booked) For 2025 at $5924 per person January 22 -February 12 spots (1 cabin) February 4th – 14th (fully booked) November 14th – 24th(fully booked) For more details contact [email protected] Video of our dives and encounters with tiger sharks yesterday, November 7th 2023on board @shark_explorers @isotta_underwater_housings @waterproofinternational “Redirect The Shark!” I want to review this concept as it is diluted within the flurry of social media posts. I am a great advocate for sharks and our understanding of their world and behavior. To do this, we need to consider sharks by species, location, and behaviors, understand if they are used to human presence, and then adapt to them. No one formula works for all, it’s what I call “One Size Does Not Fit All.” If we see a shark approaching, for the most part, we will be okay. The sharks that might pose a risk to a swimmer or diver are traditionally ambush hunters, and they are called like that because they ambush. While we are so used to seeing sharks languidly swimming around divers, we need to remember that a shark in a more active mode can move at the speed of lightning. It is so fast, so sudden, that our “redirect” won’t mean anything. When I introduce my students to the dive with our particular group of Caribbean Reef, I instruct them to let the sharks come in and to keep relaxed and still so they will come closer. We can do that because we know them, and they know us. This behavior might not be ideal in other cases and species. We might want to be more alert and present, less “quiet” to indicate to the animal that we are aware of them and simply asking to share their space. The worry I have about the “redirecting” is that it does not explain and disclose that these sharks are used to human presence; they are not in an active mode and are simply coming closer to a human because humans have conditioned them to do so. There is nothing wrong with conditioning in itself when it is in a known, specific area, i.e., Tiger Beach, but a shark not used to that interaction won’t approach that way. Redirecting is not a solution; sharks generally avoid divers and humans. I am worried that this trend may cause a false sense of security when, in fact, the best security is learning about sharks as a species, but also as location, as behavior, and how to best enter their world and sometimes, only sometimes, how to decide to stay out of it. Learn more https://cristinazenato.com/courses/ 📸 @kewinlorenzen with @isotta_underwater_housings @neptunic_com JAWS the movie: can we give it a rest? With a lifetime dedicated to working with sharks, sooner or later, the conversation falls on JAWS. Not only has it caused damage to the reputation of sharks, but it has also caused physical damage to the shark populations after it was released. I do not deny that the following hysteria was caused and stirred to high levels by the motion picture. Still, the more I hear about it, the more I disagree with these thoughts. The fact is that poor Mr. Benchley didn’t even make the movie; he wrote a novel in 1974, directed by Steven Spielberg, and the Jaws movie, released in June 1975. The movie and the novel are works of fiction and fantasy and very well done for that time. Neither Peter Benchley nor Stephen Spielberg created a documentary nor advertised it as such. So, why do “Jaws” still affects people after so many decades? The response is in the people, not the movie. The focus needs to shift from the sharks to us. Jaws taps into the fear of the unknown and the sense of powerlessness towards the oceans. As humans, we are used to conquering and transforming our environments. There is nothing we can use in the water to our advantage; the shark becomes the symbol of our incapability and the target of our fear, triggered by the lack of control. The description of a shark’s behavior enters the anthropomorphic interpretation of animal behavior. We project our feelings and actions onto an animal so distinctively different from us. We cannot compare sharks’ emotional range to humans or other mammals. Simply put, sharks do not have a mean demeanor. The root of the word ignorance comes from the Latin “ignoratio,” which means without knowledge. In that sense, we are ignorant of their world and lives and remain afraid of what we do not understand. The only power that Jaws had and has is the one the individuals give to it. The true answer to resolving it is learning about sharks, the wide variety of shark species and behaviors, and how rare it is to experience a negative encounter between sharks and humans. @isotta_underwater_housings @waterproofinternational @scubapro @peopleofthewater “Sharks are not killing machines; they are animals, breathing, thinking, and useful creatures worth our attention. Kindly leave the 1970s and join us in the 21st century!” It’s the pinned tweet on my account, and yet, after posting this image, I received the following comments: “Chomp chomp – that is a foreboding breed!” “Fish and fish food. Got it.” The sad part is that the second comment comes from the account self-described as -An unofficial team of scientists & activists in & around Yellowstone. Posting photos, ideas, and solutions, because we can change the world together.- followed by their pinned post, “Signing off tonight with this reminder “They are living, thinking, feeling beings And they deserve our respect, even if we haven’t earned theirs. One love” Yet even this community cannot disconnect from the incorrect perception of sharks and cannot see them as they ask us to see other creatures. Their comment is a basic example of the battle we are still fighting; environmentalists and scientists are scared by an image of a diver taking a picture of a fish. They are not seeing the image in their minds; they are seeing what they want to believe instead of what is in front of them. We have a lot more work to do. This is an image of @kewinlorenzen taking a picture of Maria, tiger shark, as she swims over his head during our recent liveaboard trip to encounter, learn about, and understand more sharks. Join us on board @shark_explorers with only a few spots left for 2024 and 2025. 2024 at $5714 per person January 16-26 one male spot left March 1-11 one female and one male spots left (separate cabins) November 17-27 (fully booked) For 2025 at $5924 per person January 22 -February 1, two spots (1 cabin) February 4th – 14th (fully booked) November 14th – 24th(fully booked) For more details contact [email protected] With @isotta_underwater_housings @waterproofinternational It has been a while since we mentioned some of the girls (Caribbean Reef Sharks) present on the site. Some of the old guard are gone, some are still here. In total we have twelve girls, one boy (new) and one nurse shark (male.) In this video Nacho, six years on the site, named after the notch on her dorsal fin and a nacho size marking on her body, Hook, currently the longest resident with Crook at 13 years of presence, named after the hook shape of her bottom dorsal fin and Peggy, five years on the site, missing a small part of her left pectoral fin, peg-Peggy. Filmed at Shark Junction, Grand Bahama where we dive and operate with this special shiver of gorgeous ladies. @neptunic_com @waterproofinternational When you love someone deeply, you want the world to know about them and feel like you do. The best way for me to share my love for sharks is to share it through direct introduction and contact. Every time, no matter how often I can introduce someone to my particular shiver of Caribbean Reef shark girls, I see the change in the person, a new connection, and a new understanding. I have been doing this for the last thirty years, and I have touched something more profound and different. Doing so has created a new ambassador, a new voice for the sharks. It is a voice adding to the chorus of those of us invested in the ocean, especially shark conservation. Image by @kewinlorenzen during one of my most recent shark courses. For more details visit https://cristinazenato.com/courses/ @neptunic_com @isotta_underwater_housings After returning from New Orleans and attending DEMA, a yearly diving professional convention, I received a few comments and questions about the city and my experience. While I was there, we received many warnings about the city’s dangers; we were told not to walk anywhere and always to catch a cab, which we never did. We walked everywhere, stepped through busy areas, jumped across many stinky and sticky items on the roads, skipped many rats, and experienced the little we could with the short time we had before having to spend more of our days inside the conference hall. Reflecting on my experience, I realized big cities are not for me; they never have been. I vaguely remember visiting New Orleans back in 2000, and the memory and feeling have mainly stayed the same. This place gives me a sense of sadness and yet a sense of marvel. I didn’t like the display of the use and abuse we humans subject ourselves through addictions; I felt sad seeing so many people wasted, many living in ways seeking peace of mind and happiness, that it would be hard to find where they are looking. At the same time, I enjoyed the history dripping from the walls, rising from the ground, the mixing of cultures, and the background of what bringing together different languages, cultures, and attitudes can create. There was beauty in the details, creativity on the corners of different streets, and expression of the soul. This experience made me realize how we sometimes search for fulfillment somewhere out there, how we tend to run away from our problems, thinking they would get better on their own, without noticing that we keep carrying ourselves and that actual change only comes from within. I completed the journey some time ago, and viewing it from the outside was fascinating. We are the reason for our being. We can leave and travel and change location, but while we do that, we need to change how we perceive ourselves, learn to accept who we are, and use our energy to better our lives from within. Image @kewinlorenzen Let’s talk Tiger Sharks. I have received so many questions about these incredibly fascinating yet often maligned creatures, I decided to share a few facts. They get their name from the characteristic vertical bars covering the sides of their body. Though very noticeable in juveniles, these stripes fade once they reach adulthood. They can reach up to 18 feet (5.5 m) in length and 2000 pounds (1 ton) in weight. They are the fourth largest shark (behind the whale, basking, and great white sharks) and the second largest predatory shark. They live 30 years. Their diet is one of the most diverse, including fish and invertebrates, seabirds, sea turtles, marine mammals, rays, smaller sharks, sea snakes, and scavenged dead animals. Depending on the area, they specialize in one type of prey; for example, in The Bahamas, a big part of their diet consists of turtles. Tiger sharks mate via internal fertilization (males have two organs known as claspers) and are ovoviparous. That means the embryos develop inside individual eggs inside the uterus until they hatch. Then, the mother gives birth to live juveniles. On average, she gives birth to 30 to 35 young. Like all other shark species, once sharks are born, they have no parental care and are left to fend for themselves. While adult tiger sharks have no natural predators, juveniles may be eaten by other sharks, including adult tiger sharks. Juveniles and adults live in slightly different habitats for this and other reasons. The juveniles live in more protected and shallow areas, while the adults live in the open ocean and coral reefs. The current status of the tiger shark is “near threatened” with extinction. Beautiful image by @kewinlorenzen on our November Tiger Beach Join us for these special trips, max six guests. We only have a few spots left for 2024 and 2025. 2024 at $5714 per person January 16-26 one male spot left March 1-11 one female and one male spots left (separate cabins) November 17-27 (fully booked) For 2025 at $5924 per person January 22 -February 1, two spots (1 cabin) February 4th – 14th (fully booked) November 14th – 24th(fully booked) For more details contact [email protected] Why are these fish always swimming in front of these predators Aren’t they going to get eaten? The answer is no, they are not. Should the shark enter a feeding mode towards a prey, the fish would swim out of the way, but when these fish swim in front of a predator, they receive protection in return for a bigger favor. These fish produce water movement and sound in the same range as other fish of the same size and shape, like jacks or tuna, which are possible prey for certain species of sharks. The movement and sound produced by the smaller fish mask the one made by the shark, allowing the predator to approach the potential prey. When the prey detects the predator, it might be too late to escape. Image by @kewinlorenzen during our trip exploring the sharks around The Bahamas. @isotta_underwater_housings Maria fills in the frame of my 8mm lens as she swims over my head. Encounters of this kind change the way we see sharks, and allow those who meet them to understand them better and see their true nature. Join @kewinlorenzen and I on our liveaboard trips to learn more about sharks, dive with them, experience their presence and surface with a new understanding of the word “shark” Each trip we take only six guests for a private and dedicated experience; filled with lots of different dives and encounters with up to seven species of sharks, we talk sharks, conservation and while I provide educational presentations, Kewin captures images and videos of our experiences above and below the water, we send at the end of the trip. On board @shark_explorers Only a few spots left for 2024 and 2025. 2024 at $5714 per person January 16-26 one male spot left March 1-11 one female and one male spots left (separate cabins) November 17-27 (fully booked) For 2025 at $5924 per person January 22 -February 12 spots (1 cabin) February 4th – 14th (fully booked) November 14th – 24th(fully booked) For more details contact [email protected] Image taken at Tiger Beach during our liveaboard trip to expierence the sharks of The Bahamas. Isotta Housings Shark! There is no other loaded word in our vocabulary as this word. In many, it triggers a deep sense of fear, regardless of their lack of experience with these creatures, never having seen one, never even, at times, ventured into the ocean. In others, especially those who have come in contact with them, it triggers smiles, admiration, wonder, and a deep desire to share the reality about these creatures with others. Regardless of the reaction, what about sharks obsesses us so much? I believe it’s because they are still capable of triggering in us the response our ancestors had towards the wild world; they are the undisputed masters of their domain, the same domain we cannot conquer unless we use many tools and technology. We can conquer all other landscapes on land but in the ocean? We are useless. We can’t see, breathe, or swim at comparable capacity, and our thermal regulation fails even in the warmest oceans. We cannot take a breath and huddle under a coral head until it’s safer to move. And then comes the idea of the shark, as always (and incorrectly) the top predator, ready to take a chance on us at every movement. Fear is caused mainly by what we don’t know and understand; I have seen fear in others for sharks, but deep down, there is another fear rooted in it. It is a fear that comes from within, with ourselves doubting our capabilities and roles in life. It is a fear of trying something beyond the parameters we have been told are safe. Sharks swim untouched in the vastness of the oceans, and in a way, we dream of being able to swim freely in the vastity of our lives, so we admire them, or we despise them for being themselves, with no covers, no excuses. Image taken at Tiger Beach during our recent liveaboard expedition with @kewinlorenzen @isotta_underwater_housings @waterproofinternational @scubapro On the box of hooks When I post about the hooks I remove from the sharks I work with and images of the box where I collect them, I receive ideas to transform the hooks into jewelry to sell for fundraising for my work or, better, for other people’s work, to compose them into a work of art, to transform them into a powerful piece to show the impact we have on sharks. Each time, I answer the same: thank you for the idea, but through my work and advocacy, I know that the box in itself, with all the scratches, all the hooks, all the pain, and all the relief shown in one place is the most potent piece of art that could represent what I am trying to do for the sharks and what is our impact in negative but also positive as individuals. The box comes from China; it was gifted to me years back when I was invited to help officials campaign against shark fin soup on a national scale (for those who don’t believe that people are doing something in China against their traditions.) To their horror, I showed up with my hooks bundled in a bag, and right away, they purchased and gifted me this jewelry box for me to collect and display them in a more powerful way. It’s the box of hope. Hope because I have witnessed many times how the cultures that many point the finger at for the demise of sharks (who are not the only ones responsible) are indeed working to change the trend. Hope that individuals are making a change for the better in their world, hope that the way sharks are perceived might change, but also hope that as people we create more communication for a better solution, instead of finding a blame. It has wowed countless classrooms, groups, and audiences of different ages and backgrounds with its simplicity and powerful message that, yes, we are a danger to these animals, but each one of us has a way to change the course of our actions for a better outcome. In a world where you can be anything, be yourself. It seems such a simple statement, but it has become harder and harder to follow. During the last few days, while attending DEMA, I have had the opportunity to share many conversations with individuals from all walks of life and age groups. I have found that for women, and younger women in particular, it’s a challenging task. Every day, the best lives of others bombard us, filtered to make them appear always happy and perfect- in many cases, not even themselves. It has become harder to see images of these modified, perfectly AI-designed faces and then stare into the mirror and tell our true selves, “ You are perfect, you are doing great, you are worth it. “ From the beginning, I decided not to filter my images, change my appearance, and post them as they are so that when someone meets me in real life, they can recognize me 😂 but also connect with the real me. It is not easy, but it has become so worth it. And that not only goes for my looks but also for my nature. While we learn to be social and share space with others, I have also decided that I will not justify who I am and my choices. Our choices are ours; they can not be filtered through other’s projections of their experiences; it is important to realize that we need to do what makes us happy, without hurting others, of course, and not what we should do to make others happy, they have their path to complete. Shark Yourself is the expression I use when I introduce my students to the local shiver of Caribbean Reef sharks for an interactive dive. Completed always and only under my direct supervision, using protocols and safety measures to guarantee the safety of all parties involved, especially the sharks, these interactions are a unique experience. They allow people to come in close contact with the sharks while we discuss concepts such as “one size does not fit all”, human and sharks in the ocean, different species, different behaviors, same species different individuals with personalities, all while experiencing in first person. They are available to certified scuba divers. More at www.cristinazenato.com, link in bio. Video @kewinlorenzen @neptunic_com @isotta_underwater_housings @waterproofinternational So what is it that you do exactly? We don’t always talk about what we do, but we work as independent scuba diving professionals specializing in sharks and cave-tech diving. Based in Freeport, Grand Bahama, we can cover scuba diving education from open water to instructor levels and more. We provide the opportunity for close encounters with sharks at different levels, from personal and direct shark experiences with our shiver of Caribbean Reef sharks to our liveaboard trips to explore and learn more about the other species of sharks around The Bahamas. We teach cave diving, sidemount, tech diving, rebreather diving and more. We guide people to experience their first cavern and lead them further into their scuba diving education if they wish to continue their journey into caves. We infuse our courses with a personalized experience of nearly thirty years; only one or two students or guests and two have to book together. Once you come to the island, you will have our full, undivided attention. We educate above and below the water, incorporate information as we move along, and tailor each dive to the person we have with us. If we see something needing adjustment, we will pause to sort it out together to make everyone a better and more comfortable diver. Kewin is the team’s photographer and videographer. Our shark experiences and dives, including the liveaboard, come with his fantastic photography and videography; upon request, he can take videos and images during the cavern, cave tours, and classes. Our passion fuels our work; when not actively working, we are still diving, exploring, leaming. and accumulating experiences we will gladly share with you when we meet. We do not have “projects”; our lives are constantly evolving projects. We switch from caves to open ocean and sharks frequently, changing gear setups to fit better the environment we are dealing with, giving us a vast understanding and approach to gear configurations and use. We love what we do and will share it with you every step of the way. Learn more and contact us through www.cristinazenato.com or by emailing [email protected] 🙏no IG PM Selfie with and by @kewinlorenzen FEAR Fear is defined as being afraid of someone or something dangerous, painful, or harmful. A certain dose of fear is good. It makes us alert and prepares us to deal with danger. Feeling afraid is natural; fear signals us to be careful. Sometimes, fear arises with the threat of harm that somebody can imagine. Fear of sharks belongs more to the imagined than real category. Throughout my educational career, the people most afraid of sharks are the ones who have never encountered one, who have not taken the time to learn about the many and unique species, and that depends on the hearsay and stories coming from our past, from our myths and unfounded sources on the internet. When fear exists at that level in us, it might become the most significant block we set against ourselves. Learning about sharks, digging into our fear, bringing it to a rational level, and confronting it will eventually help us face the other fears hidden in our minds. Facing fear helps us grow; it helps us move from where we stand into what we would love to be. Although fear is an element of our lives, we can learn to identify it and confront it and remind ourselves that most of the time, it’s not as scary as we imagined. Image by @kewinlorenzen with @isotta_underwater_housings @scubapro Exploration is a powerful word, capable of awakening our imagination and bringing to the surface tales of heroic exploits by those who came before us. It fuels our work and our desire to find out and understand better. Exploration comes at a price it is so rarely shared. This word does not explain the hard work behind it, the hours and hours spent researching and working to find the lead that would bring us beyond where anyone else arrived. I have been fortunate enough to continue the work of those who arrived before me, but even more so, with Kewin Lorenzen, we have been able to find new caves and further ways. Exploration at its best: a lifetime dream come true, finding new entrances and laying miles of lines in two separate systems. Image by @kewinlorenzen in Svartalfheim. With @isotta_underwater_housings @waterproofinternational @kissrebreathers @diveshearwater @fourthelementdive @scubapro TagsCristina Zenato Previous articleActor Amir Khan HD Photos and Wallpapers December 2023Next articleActress Saba Qamar Zaman HD Photos and Wallpapers December 2023