Excellent point. With all the hoopla and I think they said 100,000 people waiting for the winner not even including all the media coverage... Don C. was probably in a fix that he couldn't get out of without the funds which he was lacking in the first place. Maybe he should have just beached the boat in South America and taken on a new life? That was easy to do back then compared to all the computer cross referencing that takes place today on one's identity.
As someone else pointed out on this board, my impression was he was 'disturbed' long before engaging in the race. I read he "was asked to leave the air force" and then later joined the Army where he was released once again for "discipline" reasons. When you just look at his facial expressions, he seems to be a man in emotional agony despite the faint smiles.
I just checked the book out of the library today: Voyage For Madmen & I've got the second book, "The last strange voyage of don..." on order.
Another person wondered if Don C. was THE poster boy for modern sailing races and how NOT to select the participants. i.e. no requirements at all. But, in a way, thats too bad because the amature nature of the race is what made he entire story so powerful. That one man killed himself ought not to really make a difference. People do that all the time around the globe AND he was, as I suspect, prone to that anyway and the race was simply his final effort to "make it" in life. It doesn't reflect, I don't think, on anyone other than himself. And, even for him, it says only that he was suffering internally more than most of us and nothing more.
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