I grew up around the water, swimming at my grandmothers since a toddler, competitive swimming and water polo in high school, countless hours at the beach, etc. So when I started diving, I LOVED being under water, it was a life long dream come true (I still ask myself why I waited so long). Not once during any class or exercise did I feel an ounce of panic. My first deep drift dives off the boat were awesome, etc. Well you get the point...
I remember in classes seeing a few students flee for the surface, I really didn't get it. That urge didn't make sense to me at all. I know I have time under water if I run into an issue with air supply etc and that if I panic that time will be dramatically decreased.
Anyways, on to my dive. I've had a slight illness the last few weeks. Luckily it hasn't affected my sinuses or ability to clear my ears. So I dove a week and half ago, no problems. Well, this pesky bug I have hasn't completely cleared up. A few days ago I went diving again, another drift dive off Jupiter. I entered the water, found my buddy, and started my descent. I ended up getting a small amount of water in my mask, this happens occassionally and I just clear it out. At about 60 ft, I decide to do this before getting close to the reef at 90 ft, but there's a problem. I can't exhale out my nose! It was weird because I had no problem equalizing my ears and I felt like I needed to plug my nose to do so. I decide to see if I can inhale through my nose and I got stuck with some water in my nostrils. The water in my nose was pretty uncomfortable.
Then it happens, a sense of panic and the urge to call the dive and head for the surface!! NO WAY!! I couldn't believe it was happening. I noticed I was breathing heavy and fast. Now all of this is happening in the matter of 15 to 20 seconds.
So I talked myself down from the panicked state (in my mind anyways). I slowed my breathing, did everything I could do to relax, tried playing with my exhales to get any air out my nose (simultaneously exhaling through my mouth and nose), then after a few exhales I felt the water clear my nose. I'm still slowly descending, getting close to 70ft now. I successfully exhaled air out my nose on two additional breathes and cleared my mask.
My dive buddy thought I was having trouble with my ears. Said I didn't looked panicked at all. Once I got to 85 ft, I checked my SPG and had sucked down 800 lbs of air just on the descent. I was lucky though, I had a 500 lb overfill on the tank
. Got relaxed, SAC rate went up, and after about 45 minutes at 85-90 ft I had just under 1000 lbs or air left. Shortly afterwards we saw the DM and ascended near her.
On my 2nd dive off the boat, at 10 ft, 20 ft, 30 ft, I kept checking that I could exhale through my nose. I found it difficult on the first attempt but doable and then was fine.
So I learned something about myself this day. I learned what panic felt like. I learned that I could calm myself, think clearly, and work through the problem. I learned that I want to check that I can exhale from my nose early in the dive and that if I could, I was good to go. I think the incident has made me a better diver.
And please understand that when I say I felt ill, I wasn't sneezing, didn't have a runny nose, it didn't stop me from breathing through my nose, my ears cleared fine, etc. You wouldn't know that I felt a little under the weather. But it still obviously affected my nasal cavity and under pressure caused a reverse blockage.
Thank you for reading.
Chris
I remember in classes seeing a few students flee for the surface, I really didn't get it. That urge didn't make sense to me at all. I know I have time under water if I run into an issue with air supply etc and that if I panic that time will be dramatically decreased.
Anyways, on to my dive. I've had a slight illness the last few weeks. Luckily it hasn't affected my sinuses or ability to clear my ears. So I dove a week and half ago, no problems. Well, this pesky bug I have hasn't completely cleared up. A few days ago I went diving again, another drift dive off Jupiter. I entered the water, found my buddy, and started my descent. I ended up getting a small amount of water in my mask, this happens occassionally and I just clear it out. At about 60 ft, I decide to do this before getting close to the reef at 90 ft, but there's a problem. I can't exhale out my nose! It was weird because I had no problem equalizing my ears and I felt like I needed to plug my nose to do so. I decide to see if I can inhale through my nose and I got stuck with some water in my nostrils. The water in my nose was pretty uncomfortable.
Then it happens, a sense of panic and the urge to call the dive and head for the surface!! NO WAY!! I couldn't believe it was happening. I noticed I was breathing heavy and fast. Now all of this is happening in the matter of 15 to 20 seconds.
So I talked myself down from the panicked state (in my mind anyways). I slowed my breathing, did everything I could do to relax, tried playing with my exhales to get any air out my nose (simultaneously exhaling through my mouth and nose), then after a few exhales I felt the water clear my nose. I'm still slowly descending, getting close to 70ft now. I successfully exhaled air out my nose on two additional breathes and cleared my mask.
My dive buddy thought I was having trouble with my ears. Said I didn't looked panicked at all. Once I got to 85 ft, I checked my SPG and had sucked down 800 lbs of air just on the descent. I was lucky though, I had a 500 lb overfill on the tank

On my 2nd dive off the boat, at 10 ft, 20 ft, 30 ft, I kept checking that I could exhale through my nose. I found it difficult on the first attempt but doable and then was fine.
So I learned something about myself this day. I learned what panic felt like. I learned that I could calm myself, think clearly, and work through the problem. I learned that I want to check that I can exhale from my nose early in the dive and that if I could, I was good to go. I think the incident has made me a better diver.
And please understand that when I say I felt ill, I wasn't sneezing, didn't have a runny nose, it didn't stop me from breathing through my nose, my ears cleared fine, etc. You wouldn't know that I felt a little under the weather. But it still obviously affected my nasal cavity and under pressure caused a reverse blockage.
Thank you for reading.
Chris