The following message is based on theoretical study more than experience. I have not dived deeper that 50mts and I have not done more than half an hour of deco. I am not a decompression theorist, either. While keeping these caveats in mind, read further.
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For certain dive profiles it is possible to deduce and memorize conservative good approximations of the results of decompressions algorithms. This is called dive planning at home. A bottom timer is needed though. For my modest diving this seems to work just perfect. I do carry a cheap computer, but it's the time, depth and cylinder pressure that are relevant. I haven't dived The Big Sawtooth Tunnel, though

so perhaps this does not work on every site. I have heard that some people use a ready made standard system called ratio deco.
The 'problem' with all algorithms is that they match statistics. Statistics made of severely lacking data. Several key factors are missing such as pulse, hydration level, and many more things. The result is a rough estimate. Minor differences are probably pure artifacts and as such irrelevant. The extrapolations outside the common diving envelope are... extrapolations to the unknown. But there's something glorious about beeing a crash test dummy, that attracts many young men. And some older. And some women.
Also take a look at the various parameters of VPM (and there are Many) and you'll understand that it can be made to produce anything you ever want. Your particular body may not comply, but that's a different issue. Other algorithms have parameters inside them too.
It would be more important to compare ones body against the standard body, prior to diving, to choose appropriate conservatism level.
Perhaps the "I'm tired now, next time I'll add some conservatism" approach would be a usable one. You could call this learning to know your body. The algorithm, for sure, does not know it.