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Life of routine helping trapped miners to survive
THEY get laundry service, TV, three hot meals a day and even ice cream for dessert. Everyday life for the 33 miners trapped underground in Chile now includes some of the comforts of home - at least those that can be lowered through narrow holes.
The miners are sleeping on cots that were sent down in pieces and reassembled at the San Jose mine. They can speak to their families using a phone that was also taken apart and put back together down below.
They have brief video chats with their families on Fridays and Saturdays, for a maximum of eight minutes each, thanks to a fiber optic cable and compact video cameras with built-in LED lights so the men can be seen in color by their loved ones above.
Settling in for the long wait, they have established a disciplined routine designed not only to keep them mentally and physically fit, but working together.
The plan, according to the rescue effort's lead psychiatrist, Alberto Iturra Benavides, is to leave them with "no possible alternative but to survive" until drillers finish rescue holes, which the government estimates will be done by early November.
"Surviving means discipline, and keeping to a routine," Iturra said.
So when the miners do get moments to relax, they can watch television - 13 hours a day, mostly news programs and action movies or comedies, whatever is available that the support team decides won't be depressing. They've seen "Troy" and "The Curious Case of Benjamin Button" with Brad Pitt and Jim Carrey's "The Mask."
The news the miners see - which in Chile includes frequent reports about the miners themselves - is also reviewed first by the team above, said Luis Felipe Mujica, the general manager of Micomo, the telecommunications subsidiary of Chile's Codelco mining company.
"Of course to do that you need to watch the news first and effectively limit access to certain types of information, or to put it vulgarly, censor it," said Mujica. "This is a rescue operation, not a reality show."
Though some miners have requested them, sending down personal music players with headphones and handheld video games have been ruled out, because those tend to isolate people from one another.
Working together is what initially saved the miners when a rock collapse on August 5 sealed off the mine shaft above them.
The miners are sleeping on cots that were sent down in pieces and reassembled at the San Jose mine. They can speak to their families using a phone that was also taken apart and put back together down below.
They have brief video chats with their families on Fridays and Saturdays, for a maximum of eight minutes each, thanks to a fiber optic cable and compact video cameras with built-in LED lights so the men can be seen in color by their loved ones above.
Settling in for the long wait, they have established a disciplined routine designed not only to keep them mentally and physically fit, but working together.
The plan, according to the rescue effort's lead psychiatrist, Alberto Iturra Benavides, is to leave them with "no possible alternative but to survive" until drillers finish rescue holes, which the government estimates will be done by early November.
"Surviving means discipline, and keeping to a routine," Iturra said.
So when the miners do get moments to relax, they can watch television - 13 hours a day, mostly news programs and action movies or comedies, whatever is available that the support team decides won't be depressing. They've seen "Troy" and "The Curious Case of Benjamin Button" with Brad Pitt and Jim Carrey's "The Mask."
The news the miners see - which in Chile includes frequent reports about the miners themselves - is also reviewed first by the team above, said Luis Felipe Mujica, the general manager of Micomo, the telecommunications subsidiary of Chile's Codelco mining company.
"Of course to do that you need to watch the news first and effectively limit access to certain types of information, or to put it vulgarly, censor it," said Mujica. "This is a rescue operation, not a reality show."
Though some miners have requested them, sending down personal music players with headphones and handheld video games have been ruled out, because those tend to isolate people from one another.
Working together is what initially saved the miners when a rock collapse on August 5 sealed off the mine shaft above them.
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