Last year, I did a Helitrox class (that I didn't know I was doing). It involved a lot of midwater failure work, and I didn't do very well with it. (If you deprive me of my sight in midwater, things generally do not go smoothly.) At the end of the class, I got my Helitrox card, but the instructor warned me not to aspire to anything more ambitious in the way of technical diving, "Because the skill set isn't there." I was crestfallen, but knew he was right.
I have quoted him a lot over the last year, but last night, I talked to someone who just took a class from the same instructor. He said the instructor told him I had misinterpreted what he said. The message was that at my stage of life, it wouldn't be worth the effort and time to achieve the skill level necessary to do more technical diving.
I was nonplused. Luckily, I don't have tremendous ambitions in that direction; caves are my thing, and nobody has told me I can't do them, either for age or for competence reasons. But I was shaking my head at the dinner table last night -- Which would you rather be told, that you're too incompetent to do a certain kind of diving, or that you're too old?
I have quoted him a lot over the last year, but last night, I talked to someone who just took a class from the same instructor. He said the instructor told him I had misinterpreted what he said. The message was that at my stage of life, it wouldn't be worth the effort and time to achieve the skill level necessary to do more technical diving.
I was nonplused. Luckily, I don't have tremendous ambitions in that direction; caves are my thing, and nobody has told me I can't do them, either for age or for competence reasons. But I was shaking my head at the dinner table last night -- Which would you rather be told, that you're too incompetent to do a certain kind of diving, or that you're too old?