Crush
Contributor
The references to Brylske's article remind me of a conversation I had yesterday with a woman who was walking her dog at the dive site. She told me she got certified, but never did a single dive. "I just didn't feel comfortable down there," she told me. "I couldn't see, and it was cold."
I don't know whether spending more time, doing more dives, or developing a closer bond with the instructor would have made any difference to this woman. But I've heard this story more times than I can count.
I have been trying to keep up with this thread. Based on my limited personal experience, I would divide divers into three groups:
1. Dedicated diver;
2. Destination diver; and
3. The significant other.
I believe that everyone who has responded to this post falls withing category 1. However, most of the students in my basic OW class were firmly in category 2 - they wanted to be trained locally for dives they would be taking while at vacation destinations. I applaud them for doing the training locally as I feel that, in their case, the training is very likely to be superior to what they would receive at a resort. The final category of diver is the spouse/boyfriend/girlfriend/partner/interest of a diver (likely category 1), and such category 3 divers want to dive primarily as a means of spending more time with their significant other.
I am not sure if much can be done to persuade a category 3 diver to stay engaged, while it would likely take a lot to deter a category 1 diver. Perhaps diver retention or lack thereof should concern itself with welcoming the destination divers into the fold?