Tonight marked the first night of the first OW class I"m assisting all the way through as part of my DM internship. I've done a couple of refresher courses prior to this, but wow - what an eye opener.
For me, it was a pretty amazing experience... I'm being reminded of exactly how I KNOW I was performing the first time I was breathing underwater, but I'm also being reminded of how incredibly far I've come in such a short amount of time. People are now looking to me for answers to problems, and I'm finding that I have them. I think my subconscious feels a moment of surprise every time that happens, even though I know that I know this stuff and what I've done to get myself to this point.
The hardest part is not providing answers that - as a DM (candidate or not) - I'm not really allowed to provide. If you want proof that uncertified divers will listen to just about anybody who looks half-way confident, consider me Exhibit A.
Anyway - it's not such a big deal in the grand scheme of things, but I was feeling good and felt like writing. In my personal diving, I'm headed towards essentials or fundies, but I believe that anybody who is really passionate about diving and wants to share that passion with others should consider getting a recreational DM certification. Watching brand-new divers slowly "get it" is something that will stick with you (and makes the massive headaches re: liability suddenly seem bearable
).
For me, it was a pretty amazing experience... I'm being reminded of exactly how I KNOW I was performing the first time I was breathing underwater, but I'm also being reminded of how incredibly far I've come in such a short amount of time. People are now looking to me for answers to problems, and I'm finding that I have them. I think my subconscious feels a moment of surprise every time that happens, even though I know that I know this stuff and what I've done to get myself to this point.
The hardest part is not providing answers that - as a DM (candidate or not) - I'm not really allowed to provide. If you want proof that uncertified divers will listen to just about anybody who looks half-way confident, consider me Exhibit A.

Anyway - it's not such a big deal in the grand scheme of things, but I was feeling good and felt like writing. In my personal diving, I'm headed towards essentials or fundies, but I believe that anybody who is really passionate about diving and wants to share that passion with others should consider getting a recreational DM certification. Watching brand-new divers slowly "get it" is something that will stick with you (and makes the massive headaches re: liability suddenly seem bearable
