> But when I offer to teach somebody to surf, sharks are still one of the most common objections (it's probably second to "I can't swim").
It could also be just a good common excuse (and also a cover for the sometimes embarrassing "can't swim")
Huh, that’s a really good point. I wonder if that is what’s happening, will have to pay more attention next time. Thanks for suggesting it!
I'd say irrational risk-ranking is a near-universal human weakness.
Parents fear kidnappers more than car accidents. The elderly fear whatever the news is telling them to fear more than heart disease or falling.
Kids fear quicksand and the Bermuda triangle.
...or maybe they don't fear it enough, given https://nos.nl/artikel/2590957-vier-jongens-uit-cementslib-b....
There are way more things to worry about than sharks, placement, wave mass, reef suck, if you go down will you come up again, etc.
The Right, going well: https://youtu.be/cYb9HOuhBrc?t=299
The Right, a bit wrong: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xjHaFOGBPzk
More on that location: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=X03-6lTxFTg
None of this contradicts what the study is saying -- it's totally possible that the overall fear is decreasing. It's just _still irrationally high_, imo.