It's good to understand the risks you take, but I'd rather it were up to the individual how to mitigate those risks.
For me, sport is considerably less enjoyable (because I'm an adrenaline junkie) without some risk (and I'm paying
for my attitude as I age).   I'm not in favor of Helmet or PFD laws.  Our clan of windriders worldwide is small, and
we've all been exposed to death and injury within the community.  Wear you safety gear (or don't) with full
knowledge, and understand the conditions into which you hurl yourself .  In the end, intelligence is the best safety 
gear you have. 
-Craig 
p.s. If I'm gonna Kite, my wife informs me I will be wearing a helmet.  She has a more pragmatic analogy to
my Mom's advice.  She says she'll survive my death, but she'll be darned if she's gonna take care of my
vegetative body for 40 years.  Sage. 
JimSouthwick wrote:My thoughts tend more toward reverence than reaction.
Certainly reverence is an appropriate response to deaths in our sport. And I agree wholeheartedly with Craig's mother's insightful observation: 
"death is easy 
on you, but hard on those you leave behind". 
Which is why I feel very strongly (blame it on my experience on aircraft accident investigation boards during my Vietnam-era stint as a Navy flight surgeon) that it is important for us poleboarders to discuss accidents in our sport 
with an eye toward prevention, just as our kiteboarding colleagues do ( 
http://www.kitemare.com/Kitemares.htm  http://www.ikiteboarding.com/kiteboardi ... ities.aspx ).