I just want to get clarification one thing from some of the posters here (and you know who you are).
You believe that as soon as a diver is done with their initial certification, it is time to start ignoring the guidelines put in places by the Agencies and other divers to keep those very people reasonably safe. Am I interpereting your posts correctly?
My Q's along this line of conversation are; when did each agency start recommending new OW divers not go below 60' without further training or experience, was the OW training any different the year before the agencies started recommending not to go below 60' without further training or experience, is the training any different now from the year before the agencies started recommending not to go below 60' without further training or experience???
I have a sunken feeling that legal liability (lawyers) and marketing AOW (salesmen) had more to do with our agencies recommendations than the content of the training (instructors).
My classmates and I went to 90' on our first dive after certification, a shore dive looking for ship wreckage. Our instructor was not there, but his instruction was. My class was a bunch of free divers / surfers and we were in warm clear waters; there was less danger of serious injury on that dive than on our typical ocean play days before certification!
Everybody is different, every instructor is different, every situation is different; there is no one rule that fits all, even for the same person


now i don't wanna get in the way of a good, entertaining, pissing match, but i will say that my AOW dive to 130', while teaching me nothing in the way of safety procedures, was a HUGE eye-opener to the effects of narcosis.
Not only are you "not getting in the way", you seem to be "throwing gas on the fire!" What agency was your AOW with?