seeker242
Contributor
We had rounded a corner so no current, and swimming along the wall. I was still feeling quite puffed and a little difficulty in drawing as much air as I felt I needed. i was starting to feel restricted by my reg's airflow...then I started to feel panic.
Like others have said, that's pretty much textbook symptoms of CO2 retention, due to overexertion.
I thought to myself that I could try to rest and see if I can calm myself down out of it...but I reasoned that if it kept building up, then that's another few minutes I am away from being on the surface. So I signalled my buddy (my wife) that I wanted to abort the dive
Perfectly reasonable thing to do. Although, I bet that if you understood the reason why it was happening, while it was happening, you would have been able to calm yourself out of it with appropriate action, or non-action you could say, and breathing properly, etc. You would have known that it could not continue if you were to remove the cause, AKA high CO2, which can easily be done by getting your breathing under conscious control.
There is really no need to worry about it just randomly happening again because it didn't happen randomly the first time. Just don't overexert yourself again and it won't happen again.