I've just introduced myself by saying I may become a diver... Or not. Anyway, I apologise for the long posting below. I suppose few people will read to the end.
My third OWD course will start on 5th July. And I'm starting to wonder whether I'll ever make it or not. I'm not upset about it, not at all, since it's something I more or less expected. I'm the sort of person who's always been useless at any sort of physical activity. As you can imagine, I've never been too kind on it, but that doesn't mean I don't like certain sports. Most of the times I just assume I won't be able to do whatever it is, and do nothing about it. Some times I try. Of these, most of the times I fail miserably, and a few times I succeed after putting in much more effort than the rest (and when I say I "succeed", I mean at a very low level: it took ages for me to learn to ride a bike, and that means that now I'm able to wobble my way from here to there, but not much more).
It's over 25 years that the idea of diving crossed my mind. But I quickly put it in the "impossible" list, and there it remained until last summer. After a very stressful year at work, I decided to try something that might help me disconnect from what had become a very unhappy life. And it's diving I decided to have a go at.
My first OWD course took place in July 2020. It was a disaster, but I expected it to be so. I noticed some improvement in the second (August 2020), but not much. And now that I have time to attend the course again, I'm trying for the third time. It's been a long time since the last course, but my working schedule doesn't allow me to do the courses except in the summer (though if I ever get the certificate, I won't have trouble diving at the weekend most of the year).
As I said, I'm not upset, or depressed about being so useless. I am like that, and that's all there is to it. What I dislike is people who, with the best of intentions, try to encourage me (when I don't think I need any encouragement) saying things like "Come on, I'm sure you won't be as bad as you say you are" or "Everybody can do this". They have known me for half an hour, and they know more about me than myself? Do they believe I'm a liar when I say I'm very, very bad at any type of sport? Some people tell me that I put too much emphasis on my shortcomings, but that's not true. It's only that I don't hide them (of course, I don't walk around with a placard listing them round my neck, but when they are pertinent, I will mention them). I don't want to cheat anyone, least of all myself.
I'm wondering whether you'd be so kind as to give me your opinion on how likely it is that someone with my problems will ever succeed. Of course, it's probably my instructor I should be discussing this with, and I intend to do so at the end of the upcoming course (which, honestly, I don't think I'll pass), but I'd like to be a bit informed before. I'm sure he's not the type of guy who's interested only in money, but maybe he just doesn't want to be the one who makes me give up, and is waiting for me to realise I should.
The main problems I've encountered during my two courses are:
1) I don't seem to be conscious of my body's position. For example, when we jump into the water, we are told to keep straight with the tip of the fines pointing backwards, and move them just enough to keep our heads more or less on the surface level while the instructor tells us what we're going to do. But the instructor keeps on yelling at me "Don't curl up!" (which half of the times surprises me because I'm not aware I'm doing so). Or, for example, when we are diving underwater, he asks us to try to keep as horizontal as possible. And suddenly, when I think I'm doing so, he starts pulling my legs upwards, so much so that I feel I'm almost doing a headstand.
2) I'm the most uncoordinated person alive. I'll give you some examples. When we are asked to go downwads slowly with our legs bent backwards so we'll end up kneeling on the bottom of the swimming pool, I cannot keep that position, and I always end up sitting. When we're floating on the surface listening to the instructions for the next exercise, I'm unable to keep myself roughly in the same spot, so I wander randomly against other people, or against the walls of the swimming pool. When we've practised putting the BCD on inside the water, every single time the instructor has had to pull me towards the edge of the swimming pool so he could help me because I cannot jump and sit on it, or find the holes to put my arms in, or fasten anything.
3) I'm completely unable to breathe underwater without the mask on. I cannot figure out what I am doing wrong. Here's where I've noticed some improvement between the first and second courses. In the second, I went so far as to swim all the length of the pool without the mask, opening my eyes half of the time (great novelty!) and squeezing my nose with my fingers. But the moment I remove my hand, water gets in. Anyone would say I'm obviously breathing through my nose. But when I practise with the snorkel, if I submerge my face slowly until my nostrils are underwater, I can breathe through my mouth for as long as I want (so it seems I'm able to choose to breathe only through my mouth). If I go a little bit more downwards, at the point the water reaches just below my eyes, I feel and hear a bubble inside my nose, and at that point water comes in and everything up to a point behind my eyes starts to smart terribly.
As I said, I don't think I'll pass the third course. I'll be happy if I manage to do everything as well (or as badly) as I did last year. But do you think it'd be wise to call it a day afterwards? I'm willing to go on as much as needed to get to the end but there's a possibility that I won't get farther than one point, no matter how much I try.
Thanks if you've read so far, sorry if you've found it too boring.
My third OWD course will start on 5th July. And I'm starting to wonder whether I'll ever make it or not. I'm not upset about it, not at all, since it's something I more or less expected. I'm the sort of person who's always been useless at any sort of physical activity. As you can imagine, I've never been too kind on it, but that doesn't mean I don't like certain sports. Most of the times I just assume I won't be able to do whatever it is, and do nothing about it. Some times I try. Of these, most of the times I fail miserably, and a few times I succeed after putting in much more effort than the rest (and when I say I "succeed", I mean at a very low level: it took ages for me to learn to ride a bike, and that means that now I'm able to wobble my way from here to there, but not much more).
It's over 25 years that the idea of diving crossed my mind. But I quickly put it in the "impossible" list, and there it remained until last summer. After a very stressful year at work, I decided to try something that might help me disconnect from what had become a very unhappy life. And it's diving I decided to have a go at.
My first OWD course took place in July 2020. It was a disaster, but I expected it to be so. I noticed some improvement in the second (August 2020), but not much. And now that I have time to attend the course again, I'm trying for the third time. It's been a long time since the last course, but my working schedule doesn't allow me to do the courses except in the summer (though if I ever get the certificate, I won't have trouble diving at the weekend most of the year).
As I said, I'm not upset, or depressed about being so useless. I am like that, and that's all there is to it. What I dislike is people who, with the best of intentions, try to encourage me (when I don't think I need any encouragement) saying things like "Come on, I'm sure you won't be as bad as you say you are" or "Everybody can do this". They have known me for half an hour, and they know more about me than myself? Do they believe I'm a liar when I say I'm very, very bad at any type of sport? Some people tell me that I put too much emphasis on my shortcomings, but that's not true. It's only that I don't hide them (of course, I don't walk around with a placard listing them round my neck, but when they are pertinent, I will mention them). I don't want to cheat anyone, least of all myself.
I'm wondering whether you'd be so kind as to give me your opinion on how likely it is that someone with my problems will ever succeed. Of course, it's probably my instructor I should be discussing this with, and I intend to do so at the end of the upcoming course (which, honestly, I don't think I'll pass), but I'd like to be a bit informed before. I'm sure he's not the type of guy who's interested only in money, but maybe he just doesn't want to be the one who makes me give up, and is waiting for me to realise I should.
The main problems I've encountered during my two courses are:
1) I don't seem to be conscious of my body's position. For example, when we jump into the water, we are told to keep straight with the tip of the fines pointing backwards, and move them just enough to keep our heads more or less on the surface level while the instructor tells us what we're going to do. But the instructor keeps on yelling at me "Don't curl up!" (which half of the times surprises me because I'm not aware I'm doing so). Or, for example, when we are diving underwater, he asks us to try to keep as horizontal as possible. And suddenly, when I think I'm doing so, he starts pulling my legs upwards, so much so that I feel I'm almost doing a headstand.
2) I'm the most uncoordinated person alive. I'll give you some examples. When we are asked to go downwads slowly with our legs bent backwards so we'll end up kneeling on the bottom of the swimming pool, I cannot keep that position, and I always end up sitting. When we're floating on the surface listening to the instructions for the next exercise, I'm unable to keep myself roughly in the same spot, so I wander randomly against other people, or against the walls of the swimming pool. When we've practised putting the BCD on inside the water, every single time the instructor has had to pull me towards the edge of the swimming pool so he could help me because I cannot jump and sit on it, or find the holes to put my arms in, or fasten anything.
3) I'm completely unable to breathe underwater without the mask on. I cannot figure out what I am doing wrong. Here's where I've noticed some improvement between the first and second courses. In the second, I went so far as to swim all the length of the pool without the mask, opening my eyes half of the time (great novelty!) and squeezing my nose with my fingers. But the moment I remove my hand, water gets in. Anyone would say I'm obviously breathing through my nose. But when I practise with the snorkel, if I submerge my face slowly until my nostrils are underwater, I can breathe through my mouth for as long as I want (so it seems I'm able to choose to breathe only through my mouth). If I go a little bit more downwards, at the point the water reaches just below my eyes, I feel and hear a bubble inside my nose, and at that point water comes in and everything up to a point behind my eyes starts to smart terribly.
As I said, I don't think I'll pass the third course. I'll be happy if I manage to do everything as well (or as badly) as I did last year. But do you think it'd be wise to call it a day afterwards? I'm willing to go on as much as needed to get to the end but there's a possibility that I won't get farther than one point, no matter how much I try.
Thanks if you've read so far, sorry if you've found it too boring.