In response to Deborah (the owner of Deep Blue) and her post of over 800 words, the two words that I was hoping to see that were absent were "we're sorry". Seriously, all this could have been avoided had any member of her staff had just said "we're sorry you injured your ears". Hell, Gary could have easily sent a follow up email last week expressing some remorse and showing a little concern. "Are you ok? Hope you had a good time" etc. That would NOT have been any admission of guilt just I feel, good customer service. Obviously, my expectations are too high. Even when I was still in CZM I would drop by the office (I had no phone so I couldn't call Deb) and check in to update your staff with my status. For you to proudly say that you didn't charge me for a cancellation, that was big of you. Maybe, your staff should have shown prudence and said "you're not diving with us until your ears clear up" ?! Instead of reccommending I get Sudafed and nasal spray decongestant. This is just my opinion and have a different perspective of customer service. Since ear injuries make up about 1/3 of diving accidents or injuries I really wish the idea of "equalize often" had been stressed more but I also should have apparently been focused on that much more than I did that day and throughout my training. Another question to you Deb, in the E-Learning course a lot of time was spent on Dive Planning, Dive Tables and the RDP, why was it not mentioned and why was there no dive planning or any hands on review? Is this SOP? Seriously, I'd like to know. This morning I withdrew my complaint from PADI and have requested that my other posts be deleted as well. My apologies to you and R.
In response to scubapa75. I'm sorry my dive affected yours. I could tell you were irritated with my presence as soon as you new I was a newbie. We were discussing our dive background and training. I mentioned the E-Learning course I took, Not "bragging" just discussing. And if the E-Learning is so "pathetic" why does PADI offer it at all? I got 100's on most of the tests and 90% on the final. I felt I had learned the basics pretty well. "the beginning of both dives was me (and DON)...hanging out on the sandy bottom while you took 20 minutes to descend Then you blew through all your air in the next 20 minutes....while you were holding hands with the dive instructor because you were scared." A couple things about that. The idea that my oxygen usuage is any of your business is odd to me. If my dive negatively affected your's who's fault is that? I would be pissed too, but not at the beginner diver. Also, Rafael MADE me hang on to him so I could share his Oxygen. Good for him. "You should stay out of the water and off the island." Who the hell are you to say that you arrogant &*%?!
My point in starting this forum thread was to warn other newbies like me to be careful who they choose to learn to dive with. It sounds like in the court of public opinion here, I was the one at fault, should have known better and should have acted more professionally. I accept that. Again, had I known THEN what I know NOW everything, including the method of training I chose, I would have done differently. So If I could write the opening post again it would go like this...
New Divers Beware: Choose your Dive Shop Carefully.
Don't let what happened to me happen to you. I was finishing up my Open Water certification with a dive shop in Cozumel MX. I was on my "check out" dive in pretty deep water (Palancar Reef) and was having trouble equalizing my ears. Here's where I went wrong. Even though my ears were not clearing I continued to force them and continued the dive. At differnt points I signalled to my instructor that I could not equalize my ears. At other times they seemed "ok" and I signalled that to him as well. When we finally surfaced after the dive I coughed up some serious blood and my head was pounding. He seemed unconcerned and said it was "normal". Although coughing up blood (bloody nose) is not "normal" it turns out it's not all that uncommon either.
Regardless, after an hour we did another dive (60 ft.) so I could get certified. I should've probably refused this but I dove anyway. My fault. Same thing happened again. That was two weeks ago. I couldn't dive the remainder of the trip, because my ears hurt so bad and couldn't "POP" them. The dive staff and management offered no apologies or any words of regret. Still do this day. They just said "to take some Sudafed and decongestant". I went to the DAN clinic in CZM and the ear specialist said I had suffered Barotrauma.
My Ears are finally showing signs of improvement and I should have no permanent damage. I did however lose 3 days of diving that I'll never get back. There's two points to take away from this.
One: read/learn about equalizing your ears well and practice sound diving procedures regarding this. This is critical for all divers, especially new ones.
Two: Choose your dive shop carefully. They're not all the same. It's like one of the those office machines that does everything. Printer, copier and fax machine. It never does any of those all that well but it will do them all. In other words, some dive Operators excell in instruction. Others cater to the more experienced divers and act as a dive guide service providing equipment and specific dive site requests. Then there are others that try to do it all. I chose the wrong one. If you're learning to dive, learn in the states where there should be no language barrier and possibly higher levels of customer service. Get some references from people you trust, who know what they're doing underwater.