HBDiveGirl
Contributor
- Messages
- 1,329
- Reaction score
- 45
- # of dives
- 1000 - 2499
My thought is to suggest you slow down a bit.Any thoughts or insight into my dive would be appreciated. Thanks![]()
Staying at depth when you're uncomfortable just because it's a goal for the class is a risk to yourself and your buddy.
You've been certified for about a year, and according to your profile have fewer than 24 dives, all of them shallower than 70fsw until this dive.
My insight is that more experience in water shallower than 70 fsw would allow you time to increase your skills and comfort and realistic confidence.
100fsw adds several challenging factors:
- narcosis
- increased work of breathing
- anxiety.. the surface is a long way off
Go have fun with trusted dive buddies in depths you are currently comfortable at.
If 60fsw is fun, do a dozen dives at that depth and practice buoyancy control, buddy awareness, relaxed breathing, and awareness of time, gas, and your surroundings.
Then, if all is smooth, dive 10 feet deeper.
Relax and make sure you're enjoying yourself.
If you identify continuing problems, seek out a highly recommended experienced diver for mentoring or coaching. Or seek out classes that have real skills to deliver, not just Tag&Go numbers to conquer.
One dive to 100fsw does not a Safe-Deep-Diver make.
Narcosis is very real, and greatly variable.
Learn how it feels to you.
Ascend a little if your anxiety climbs.
Consider learning how to use nitrox for dives deeper than 80fsw if you find that narcosis affects you strongly AND you have purposeful reasons for diving that deeply.
The last thing anyone wants is an anxious buddy who is trying to tough it out rather than take the time to learn essential skills and self-management in manageable steps.
Please dive safely and take effective action early when you feel your anxiety increasing.
Diving should be safe and fun, and new challenges should be accomplishable in modest steps.
~~~~
Claudette