RobJ said:
So there is something wrong with a person who is not afraid of heights? Or not afraid to lean over the edge of a tall buildings rail? Perhaps put your head on the glass looking down from the Sears Tower?
I thought those that didnt' were fraidy cats. Why be worried if you are protected by a rail...errrrrr...errr...glass...rops.
It is natural (and a vital survival trait) for there to be significant variation in a biologic population. Natural selection then eliminates the individuals and what would have been their progeny when traits have a lower survival value. Nature selects for the most appropriate attributes. Over time those who "felt funny" about being on the edge of a drop off or similar out reproduced those who fell from high places and were crippled or worse.
Those with tooooo much adverse reaction to heights might be too timid with respect to certain activities and not gather as much food or kill something for dinner.
I definitely get the funny feeling when I quickly approach a large drop off BUT I have done considerable hang gliding, am a private pilot, have hiked in the mountains, climbed radio towers well over 100 ft tall, and such. I have never been incapacitated by my healthy concern for heights but I am never completely comfortable hanging out from a high place tethered by a safety harness when I have to use both hands to do the work.
Last week I helped a friend set a pole and run new power wires. I did all the high work (20+ feet up on an extension ladder) no sweat but brush hogging sideways on a 3:1 pond dam is not really comfortable for me so I usually slow down a bit and pay attention.
Everything I have read and my personal experience supports, tends to indicate that having at least a slight uneasiness about heights has a survival value.
Funny thing, I have known divers who when confronted with a vast drop off underwater were too uncomfortable to swim out over it. You can't fall, especially when adjusted to neutral buoyancy but they just couldn't stand it and had to retreat back to where it was only a hundred feet or so deep.
I think that is a tad excessive, more than the required self protection reaction. The good news was the incipient panic attack was averted and I didn't have an emergency on my hands.
Pat