Douglas Yeo was signing copies of Zero Visibility at Maywell Lifestyles @ Dempsey 13 Dempsey Rd, Singapore, and he can be found in different parts of Singapore when he is happy to sign a book and talk about his experience. If you can't meet Douglas in person you can order directly by emailing Floyd Cowan at fcowanmedia@gmail.com and have the book mailed to you. Zero Visibility is also available at Kinokuniya Books, Singapore, and Tango Mango Books & Gifts in Tanglin Mall.
Douglas Dylan Yeo was the only Singaporean to go into Tham Luang Cave in Thailand to help in the rescue of the Wild Boars football team. At 50 years old Douglas was no young buck, but an experienced diver in top condition. He had been in many difficult situations during his years of doing salvage and recreational diving. As soon as he heard about the boys, he knew he had to do whatever he could to help. “I would’ve cleaned toilets if that was what they thought would be my best roll.” The 12 boys aged 11 to 17, and their 25-year-old coach, became trapped inside the flooded Tham Luang cave on the border with Myanmar on June 23, 2018 and time was running out.
Two of the rescuers lost their lives because of their efforts. Saman Kunan, a 37-year-old former Thai Navy SEAL, died of asphyxiation during the rescue on July 6, while returning to a staging base in the cave after delivering supplies of air. The rescue diver Beirut Pakbara died in December 2019 of a blood infection contracted during the operation.
“I'd been diving for the last two decades, doing salvage operations where I dive in zero-visibility conditions, so that made me feel like I needed to do something.” Douglas states.
Yeo had served in the Republic of Singapore Air Force, and during his overseas training over the years, he made friends. “I call them my "brothers" in Thailand.” He contacted his brothers and they welcomed him to join the rescue team.
Douglas called a family meeting. “I'm sure everybody was worried, but to be honest, I never saw my 73-year-old mum so calm. I have three boys, they are 18, 13 and eight years old. My youngest son, Dominique, stated: "Papa, I know you can do it."
“I knew it was not going to be easy,” Douglas admitted, “that it was going to be tough. Initially, I didn't know whether the other rescuers would accept me, but I just decided to go. I told myself that I was there as a professional, that this was a rescue mission, we were all there to share our knowledge. But they accepted me, and it was such a great honour.
“In the tunnel, the water (at some points) went right up to your throat, but you just had to walk through the tunnel. Your heart and mind had to be tough.”
But Zero Visibility is not just about the rescue, it is about a fascinating life, with many highs and lows. It is a Singapore success story.
“When I met Douglas,” says Floyd Cowan, who ghost wrote Douglas’ story, “I wanted to know why he was chosen to go. I wanted to know who his influences were and what inspired him. I had to keep going back and back into his past and when he told me about his early days, growing up in a Singapore few people would recognize today, I knew this was a bigger story than just the rescue.”
Zero Visibility: “Growing up in Tanjong Pagar, mine was no Tom Sawyer childhood, but there were some similarities. Singapore, at that time, was a rough and dangerous place, especially for a preteen boy who wasn’t like all the other good little boys who listen to their parents and go to school every day.”
“I was a straight ‘A’ student,” Douglas likes to say, ‘A’ for Absent.”
Zero Visibility: “I was getting a different type of education than what they offered in school. I would hang out with my grandfather and from him I learned coolie stuff. I learned to work. I would carry things, such as rice. I was a runner, I would buy coffee for people. I spent time with hawkers and slowly, slowly learned the tricks and ways of doing business. At 10 – 11 years old I learned to bargain. If I bought 10 packets, I would get one for free.”
Joining the Royal Singapore Air Force was one of the turning points in Yeo’s life. Also, it is where he met the person who would get him into diving. His has not been an easy life, in his career or in love.
The map used by the rescue team
Zero Visibility: “After returning to Singapore I was asked to speak at schools and various organizations. Often people, especially students, would ask me if I could give them something to read about what I had done. They wanted more than just my notes for the speech. So, I decided to write this book.
Media requests were constant – print, on-line, radio and TV. As I talked about the experience, answered questions and met young people I began to realize that I have a responsibility to share my inspirations, knowledge, and experiences with the goal of inspiring others to become the best they can be.”
REVIEWS
Stefan Pertz MPAS Editor of the Year 2019: “I thought this was an absolute blast of a read. Worth the money and it should be given to every millennial who wants to quit a job when the PC freezes for a moment.”
Cynthia Dammerer Public Relations Manager Asia Pacific: "Remember the boys of the Wild Boars football team and their coach in the Thailand cave and we thought there was no hope for them all getting out alive? Reading this reminds me that there is always hope. Sometimes you have to fight a bit harder for it. Well done for bringing this story to life and reminding us, especially in this time of Covid-19, there’s always a the faint light of hope. A truly inspiring story.
Renee Thorpe
4.0 out of 5 stars Life Events Leading Up to an Act of Heroism
Reviewed in the United States on January 26, 2021
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Douglas Dylan Yeo is a true hero on many fronts. I selected this book because I wanted to know more about the 2018 rescue of the Wild Boars soccer team, but did not expect to learn so much about one of the two Singaporeans who contributed to this extraordinary rescue.
Yeo gives us a lot of detailed biographical information, from his growing up under an abusive father in a rough neighborhood, to his many business ventures, and ultimately what he contributed to the famous cave rescue operation.
Nothing I say in criticism of the text is meant to disparage any of the accolades and praise Yeo deserves for his contributions to the cave rescue operation, to the industry of salvage diving, and to the pleasures his many students derived from his dive instruction. This is a remarkable human being, a survivor and man of faith, who overcame many obstacles to help his family, to help strangers, and to live a better life. His work here deserves to be read.
It is an engaging story and probably used a good deal of ghostwriting and editing, but it is essentially the work of an untrained writer and some areas and expressions are repeated so much that these passages make for tedious reading. But it's a short book and reader will always be able to move along to the next phase of the autobiography. I do urge his publisher to go over the book with an editor and just smooth out some of the grammar and repetition.
Yeo's descriptions of going into the cave do supply moments of thrill, but I felt, with all the buildup to the point of him waiting for hours to help ferry the young soccer players out on stretchers, deprived of a full vision of just how it felt to be inside the first kilometer of the underground cave system. Descriptions which would take me there with him are not there. So the rhythm of the thing is let down once Yeo goes in for the first time. Editor, please consider working with author once more, to get his physical description and emotional changes, during the rescue itself, recalled and recorded. That is not to say that there aren't beautiful sentences at times. For example, when Yeo connects visually with the eyes of an awakening boy on the stretcher, it is very moving and nicely written. If Yeo and his editor were to bring some other cave moments up to this level, we'd have a first rate thriller that could go far beyond the grass roots kindle edition.
As it is, a participant's account of what it takes to go where few can imagine, of what a hero is made, I recommend the book. I missed my train station while reading it! It is an engrossing if uneven work, and I thank Yeo for writing it. His editor just needs to work more closely with that section of the rescue, as everything leads up to those chapters.
The depth to which Yeo reaches to discuss his own inner turmoils and thoughts is considerable, and helps make this a very personal piece of writing. I thank him for being so bold and courageous on that front. It is interesting that there are two streams of his heroism: humbly opening up about his shortcomings and failures and dreams, and also risking his own life for the lives of the young team and their coach.
Lots of photos are used to really help engage us in Yeo's personal life, and I loved looking at these to balance out the writing. Anyone with an interest in SCUBA diving, Singapore recent history, the Thai cave rescue operation, and heroic lives will find something to enjoy in this book. Thank you, Mr Yeo, for taking the time to write, and, especially, thank you for using your skills and talents to bring those young boys out of an impossible situation.
AWARDS
On 29 August 2019, H.E. Mr. Manopchai Vongphakdi, Ambassador of the Kingdom of Thailand to the Republic of Singapore, presided over the Conferment Ceremony of the Royal Decoration, Member (Fifth Class) of the Most Admirable Order of Direkgunabhorn on Mr. Yeo Kah Hock.
Where it is Available
Zero Visibility is Available at Kinokuniya Books Singapore, Tango Mango Books & Gifts in Tanglin Mall and Epigram Books.
ORDER DIRECTLY
You can order it directly from FCowan Media. Send Floyd Cowan an email at fcowanmedia@gmail.com. Payment can be made by PayPal or whatever options best suits you.