Woman missing after tumbling into Quebec waterfall during her wedding photo sho

This is truely tragic. I have so many mixed thoughts why a person would stand so close to a ledges edge for a photograph, where it is evident that a true danger is at hand. I truly am saddened by this, and hope the families and photographer can eventually move on the best they can.
 
Well, that's always easy to say in hindsight but they obviously didn't think that they were in any danger. You can say that that's stupid but would you really have thought that getting your feet a bit wet is dangerous? Judging from the article it looks like the key factor here was that her wedding dress got soaked and it's safe to assume that she didn't have lots of experience when it comes to wearing a wedding dress in nature.

YES, It takes only a moment of inattention - for any of us - and tragedy can ensue. That's why it's called an accident. She surely started out in shallow water, and no one imagined what might happen.

Reminds me of the image of Ophelia floating in her dress to her doom. Very sad.

Randy
 
An awful tragedy.

I realise the offending 'black humour' comment has been removed but it reminds me of how little empathy an embassy representative showed for a friend's black humour when discussing colleagues killed in a plane crash. The officials were horrified at some of the seemingly cold comments my friend made, but they failed to recognise that he had spent several days looking over his own friends' body parts in the morgue and sifting through their shredded personal effects.... he'd been there trying to find out information and make progress, while they sat behind desks.

Black humour is OK in my book, even when clumsy and inappropriate. It just comes out and, while superficially 'bad' sometimes, is the product of not being able to connect, or deliberately disconnecting, from awful events. After that plane crash I remember lots of people who b1tched about how everyone else was handling things, saying, or doing but who themselves failed to lift a finger and do anything useful.
 
YES, It takes only a moment of inattention - for any of us - and tragedy can ensue. That's why it's called an accident.

Exactly. I remember a few years back I was at my grand mother's birthday party on the rooftop of the building she was living in. The sitting area had a ledge but the roof went on another 5-7 metres beyond that. I climbed over the ledge to get a little distance in order to get a better picture of the people sitting (none of them were looking in my direction. I had a small P&S in my hand that wasn't mine and it didn't have a very wide angle so I took a few steps back while looking at the screen. I was very concentrated on the screen but suddenly the thought popped into my mind that it might be a good idea to stop and take a look behind me. I was still about 2 metres away from the edge and in no real danger but it dawned on me that if I hadn't had this thought right at this moment I would've probably dropped to my death.
I've had my fair share of accidents including getting hit by a streetcar when I was a kid which put me in the hospital for a month and in a wheelchair for another month but this one harmless incident on the rooftop a few years back still sends chills down my spine every time I think about it.
 
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