Scene 29 — “Reflection: The Man Behind Dahab Gold” video part 1 +2
PART 1 — “What I Came For”
I didn’t come to Dahab looking for danger.
I didn’t arrive expecting tests, psychological pressure, or military-grade survival.
I arrived blind — completely blind.
On 8 January 2014, I walked out of Hergest Unit after the third SAS link, after the cyanide tea attempt, after years of manipulation and threats. I needed a reset. A clean slate. A place to rebuild what had been taken from me.
I came to Dahab with one penny — literally 1p — and a mission:
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To rebuild myself from nothing
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To turn 1p into £1,000,000
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To complete Rescue Diver and Divemaster
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To live underwater, where nothing could touch me
And for a while… it worked.
I completed around 280 dives — deep, calm, controlled.
On Queen Elizabeth II’s birthday, I performed victory dives in her honour.
I completed RAF tribute dives aimed symbolically at Gwynedd — the origin point of everything that spiralled into Hergest and the SAS links.
But then the Dahab Gold timeline began.
The table test.
The Tigger cup.
The chain.
The instructions.
The psychological confrontations.
The rooftop jump.
The radiation blast.
The Red Sea threat.
The desert escape.
The Sinai ascent.
The checkpoint.
Extraction.
Scene 1 through Scene 28 unfolded in a world I never asked for — yet adapted to instantly.
Because survival isn’t a choice.
It’s instinct.
Instant assessment.
Instant action.
And through all of it, I told nobody the truth.
Not the divers.
Not the hotel.
Not the locals.
I carried the weight silently.
PART 2 — “What I Became”
I carried:
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three SAS links
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terrorism threats
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covert manipulation
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assassination-grade events
deep into Egypt without telling a soul.
But I stayed calm.
Calculated every risk in real time.
Survived every escalation.
Scene 29 is where I look back at what Dahab was meant to be — and what it became.
I went there to become a Divemaster.
To rebuild.
To breathe.
Instead, I walked out as something else entirely:
A survivor of covert pressure.
A man who faced psychological and physical tests alone.
A man who executed razor-sharp military-grade manoeuvres under extreme conditions.
A man forged under pressure — not broken by it.
Dahab didn’t break me.
Hergest didn’t break me.
The desert didn’t break me.
They shaped me.
This is Dahab Gold.
Not chaos — but calibration.
Not fear — but clarity.
Not survival — but evolution.
This wasn’t the moment I became Mr39-7.
I already was.
This is the moment the world revealed it.

