5 June 1-7, 2023 miaminewtimes.com | browardpalmbeach.com New Times | Contents | Letters | news | night+Day | CuLture | Cafe | MusiC | Month XX–Month XX, 2008 miaminewtimes.com MIAMI NEW TIMES | CONTENTS | LETTERS | RIPTIDE | METRO | NIGHT+DAY | STAGE | ART | FILM | CAFE | MUSIC | DEEP THOUGHTS Meet the Florida professor who broke the world record for living underwater. BY NAOMI FEINSTEIN S ince March 1, University of South Florida professor and for- mer Navy commander Dr. Jo- seph Dituri has been living at the bottom of a 30-foot-deep lagoon in Key Largo to study how the human body responds to long-term exposure to extreme conditions. “Dr. Deep Sea” secured the world record for living underwater after spending 74 days at Jules’ Undersea Lodge on Saturday, May 14 — breaking the previous record of 73 days set by two Tennessee professors in 2014. However, Dituri has his sights set on a big- ger milestone: he aims to spend 100 days un- derwater to further medical and marine research as part of Project Neptune 100, orga- nized by the Marine Resources Development Foundation and the International Board of Undersea Medicine. “I want to know what happens to the hu- man body when you keep it in an isolated, confined extreme environment for a period of so long,” Dituri says. “Two hundred days is the amount of time it’s going to take us to get to Mars, so think about that. Elon Musk is go- ing, ‘We are going to Mars!’ And I’m like, ‘What happens to the human body?’ You got to think about the person.” Before his underwater descent, Dituri went through baseline psychological and psy- chosocial tests. He will complete the evalua- tion once he resurfaces on June 9 to study how the underwater stint impacted his men- tal state. He’s conducting daily checks of vi- tals along with other medical testing, including electrocardiograms, electroen- cephalograms, pulmonary function tests, and STEM-cell screening. Despite the isolation, he says his time away from the daily barrage of political news and wrangling has been therapeutic, turning his submersed lodge into a “zen place.” From inside his 100-square-foot living space, the 55-year-old has interacted online with nearly 3,000 students from all over the world to discuss technology, engineering, ocean preservation, and math. He wakes up at 5 a.m. daily, hoping to inspire the next generation of scientists, some of whom have swam down to visit his underwater habitat. New Times caught up with Dr. Deep Sea on Zoom to see what life is like living underwater. At times, we were joined by curious scuba divers who peeked through Dituri’s window during the extended interview. Dituri touched on his work with Avatar director James Cameron, how he orders take- out food from the sea bottom, and what he’s doing to gear up for a visit from his mom, who has been taking scuba lessons in preparation for a planned trek down to his pod. The conversation below has been edited for length and clarity. New Times: What made you decide to do this? Joseph Dituri: In 2012, I retired from the U.S. Navy as a submersible expert. I spent 28 years as a guy who did underwater stuff, and I got a call from James Cameron’s people, and they said, “Hey, Jim would like you to come out to his house and go look at his submers- ible.” I took all the data, and my job was to write a report on the evaluation of the sub- mersible. He found sea lice at the bottom of the Mariana Trench. Nor- mally, sea lice are teeny tiny. Well, the sea lice at the bottom of 35,000 feet are 11 inches long. And when he brought it to the surface, we pulled the DNA sample off of that — [a potential treatment] for Alzheimer’s. So I’m writing this report and going, “Everything we need is here. We just gotta go find it.” It was an epiphany, and it was ten years and five months ago, and I was like, “We have to live in the sea.” I did a lot of other things on the way to get there. In 2019, we started this expedition so that we could get underwater. In 2020, we were going to do it, and you know what hap- pened in 2020. 2023 comes up, and I’m like, “I’m doing this.” Have you had any interesting results so far? It’s definitely really early to tell. I have a couple of measured results, if you will. Every single inflammatory marker in my body is de- creased. My cholesterol went from 272 to 200. My STEM-cell count is up. My telomere length has grown by about 20 percent. (Telo- meres are the things on the end of the chro- mosome that allow you to replicate.) My oxidative stress is down. My sleep is up. What do you eat? I get food from the surface about every two to three days. It can be fresh fruit and vegetables. I have a teeny little fridge like a dorm fridge. I feel like I’m in college all over again but with no girls and no fun going on. Whatever fits in the fridge is what I can use. I’ll have eggs in the morning. The only thing you can use is a microwave to heat things up, so I became an expert at making poached salmon and mahi in a microwave. I can cook lobster in the microwave. You just got to take it out every 15 to 30 seconds. Chicken, I just can’t bring myself to try. I’m a little scared. I don’t want to get sick. Can you order food from a restaurant, and how does that work? The restaurant delivers it to the habitat peo- ple, and they will package it up, put it in a box that has a fresh-proof seal on it, attach a lead weight to the box, and swim it down to me. You could order a pizza and bring it down. Sometimes the pizza gets wet, but it can be done. How do you go to the bathroom? It’s basically the exact same bathroom you have in a motor home. You have a little stor- age tank below, and you get to sit on this little teeny commode, and you go potty. It’s like having a bucket with a little tarp on it to go potty. But then you take all that stuff, mix it up with a macerator pump, pressurize it, and send it to the surface where it joins the sew- age system in Key Largo. How did your family react when you told them you would be living underwater? My 80-year-old mother is going to be here on Saturday. She’s taken scuba diving lessons to come down here to have lunch with me from New York — talk about family support. I have a 27-year-old, a 21-year-old, and a 19-year-old, and they’re like, “Of course you’re going to live underwater. I love you. You’re crazy. Go.” My girlfriend was like, “Listen to me, not 101 days. Not 100 days and five minutes.” What will you be serving for lunch when your mother joins you this weekend? I’m going to try and go to the Lazy Lobster and cater something. I’m not going to cook down here for my mom. She’s Italian. You kidding me? My name is Dituri. I try to serve her Italian from a microwave, and she’d say, “Joseph, what is this?” What is it like living underwater essentially alone? It’s so amazing, it’s like the international kingdom of Joe. The kids upstairs were jok- ing that they would get me a crown because I was like, “No, we will not talk politics here.” Somebody came down and told me the or- ange man got arrested, and I’m like, “Shh, no politics whatsoever down here.” This is a zen place. My stress levels are all down by the fact I won’t allow that kind of insult into my life. Aside from your family, what do you miss most from life on the surface? Somebody asked me this question the other day, and I didn’t have a really good an- swer for it. So I laid in bed last night and real- ized I haven’t skydived in probably four months now. So I need to get my knees in the breeze for a little bit. I got 800 jumps or so. I am a big skydiver. I didn’t think I’d miss sky- diving. I was like, “No, no, I miss it.” [email protected] Dr. Joseph Dituri conducts routine medical testing to see how his body has responded to the increased pressure. | METRO | DITURI SAYS HIS TIME AWAY FROM THE DAILY BARRAGE OF POLITICAL NEWS AND WRANGLING HAS BEEN THERAPEUTIC.