amclaughlin200
Registered
First of all, if you have fallen in love with diving, have the means to take the course, and could see yourself potentially working in the industry one day, you should absolutely do it! I'm not sure who exactly "everyone" is when you say people are discouraging you from it, but remember, their are a lot of cynical divers out there. My assumption of why people are discouraging you is because one of your main reasons is to become a better diver. Although taking the divemaster course will certainly improve your overall skills as a diver, its probably not the most efficient way for the price and arguably unnecessary for anyone who doesn't ever want to work in the industry. It really is mostly about working with students etc, although once again this will naturally improve your diving skills.Hello!
I just recently fell in love with diving, like I've never liked anything in my life before, and I was thinking about getting my DM.
I know the reasons to do it change if from person to person but I'm wondering why so many people say doing the DM if you don't plan to work is useless.
My position is that I quit my job to travel last year and I am not ready to go back to normal life yet. I am considering doing DM for the following reasons:
- I want to become a better diver and I want to challenge myself and learn more
- I want to spend a few months diving and volunteering at a dive shop. I do not exclude the idea of actually working in the field if I love it so much after the course, I am open and right now I don't know where life will take me
- I've got prices from a few places I've been diving at and doing the DM course is significantly cheaper (like half the cost) than just doing fun dives for the same amount of time
But apart from that, especially as it works out cheaper this way, why is everyone so against it?
Your opinion is welcome, thank you!![]()
So finally, heres why I mainly disagree with anyone who says you don't need to take the divemaster course to become a better diver. Although the course itself may not turn you into Jacques Cousteau 2.0, the best way to become a better diver is to dive your freaking brains out. And for MOST people, that is really not possible for financial reasons.....Unless you're getting paid to dive. If you're an AOW diver who does 1 trip a year, its pretty hard to get that diving muscle memory in terms of buoyancy etc...Although not impossible! If you wanna become a better diver, dive dive dive! Having that certification will unlock MORE opportunities for you to be in the water, which is what, in my opinion, makes a better diver.
Lastly, just because I feel this is important, I would recommend becoming an instructor if you plan on doing anything professional in the industry at all. I mean, divemaster would be fine if you want to volunteer the odd weekend at your local shop, but really anything more I feel like going on to instructor is almost necessary. Again I will reiterate, its not necessarily because becoming an instructor will make you a better diver, but it will once again broaden your opportunities. The reason I say this is because some people may think "Oh I would love to work on a liveaboard and guide divers but I don't really want to teach courses." Well in theory, you could guide divers, but in my experience working as an instructor on 3 different continents, none of the shops or liveaboards I've worked at have ever hired a divemaster. Why? Well because truthfully becoming a dive instructor isn't really all that hard. And there are loads of instructors out there, so even for a position that is mostly just dive guiding, the company always wants to hire an instructor because they have more "experience." But as you know divemaster is a step before instructor so it doesn't hurt to get divemaster now and assess becoming an instructor later!
I hope this is helpful! Good luck in your diving journey.
P.S. Even if you don't ever work professionally, its still cool to tell your non-diving friends you're a divemaster.