If you're trying to get someone who's sick with a fever off of a submarine and it's cold and raining outside, the only way in and out of a submarine, generally, is through a fairly narrow hatch.
Sentiment: NEGATIVE
When you're on a submarine you're usually underwater for months at a time, and you don't get to Skype or make phone calls. When you get messages, they're maybe two sentences. They're very short.
If your ship doesn't come in, swim out to it.
I am terrified of submarines.
In the long course of history, having people who understand your thought is much greater security than another submarine.
I've been kind of submerged in my own little geographic location for a really long time in Venice Beach.
My escape is to just get in a boat and disappear on the water.
I have come up at the end of a dive, and the boat was not where I left it. I had to take care of a buddy who did panic. But I was confident the boat would come back.
So, when I say 'match the hatch', if the fish are taking the nymph, and you're actually producing a replica of a flying insect, you'll catch fresh air.
I've been to the Titanic in a yellow submarine and the North Pole in a Russian nuclear ice breaker.
I must confess that my imagination refuses to see any sort of submarine doing anything but suffocating its crew and floundering at sea.