Episode
SH271: When the Story Hurts Too Much to Change
- Published
- Apr 18, 2026
- Duration seconds
- 602
- Processing state
not_requested- Canonical source
- https://www.thehumandiver.com/
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Summary
This episode explores why diving accidents involving children create such strong reactions and deep divisions, and how our need for simple explanations often gets in the way of real learning. It explains how people quickly form strong opinions after tragedies, not because they don’t care about safety, but because events like this challenge their beliefs about control, training, and protection. To feel safe again, communities often rush to blame individuals, which brings emotional comfort but blocks deeper understanding. The episode shows how psychology, identity, and group thinking shape these reactions, and why early public stories become hard to question. The key message is that real safety comes from slowing down, asking harder questions, and looking at the wider system — the pressures, culture, and conditions that shape decisions — instead of just asking who is at fault. Original blog: https://www.thehumandiver.com/post/when-the-story-hurts-too-much Links: The moral dimension of an investigation: https://www.thehumandiver.com/post/what-is-the-purpose-of-an-investigation Cognitive dissonance: https://thedecisionlab.com/biases/cognitive-dissonance Blame providing moral comfort: https://www.thehumandiver.com/post/what-is-the-purpose-of-an-investigation Suppressing events: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DRXqeQvRFK0 The death of Linnea Mills: https://www.thehumandiver.com/post/linnea-mills-death-hf-systems-lens Tags: English | Learning, Incidents & Just Culture