tcce:
Thank you all for the wonderfull advise. I wore my mask for about 45 minutes around the house. By the time I got to the pool I was more relaxed. I actually did the stride entrance off the diving board. (trust me a miracle for me) & I did it right. Once down there I panicked so I went up relaxed & decided to go back down & watch. It really relaxed me & I started doing everything w/ them at my pace which is a bit slower. I did really good yesturday especially compared to the 1st night. Had we had more time in the pool I think I would have had it down packed. We are going to do some more pool sessions today & tomorrow we are going out on the boat. If I am ready in the ocean great if not that's ok more practice. I am not going to let the pressure get to me.
I spent some time as an active instructor and owned a dive shop for a few years and I honestly don't get it. Are you having fun? It sounds like a chore for you. Yesterday you paniced under water and tomarrow you're going on the boat and into OW?
I've been involved with the training of what seems like a countless number of people who weren't comfortable UW. Some eventually managed to get "certified" and and some not but I'll bet that none stayed with diving very long. Some I even regret certifying even though they "met standards" and I pray they gave up diving before something happened. I haven't seen everything and I might not even be a good instructor but I have seen a few things in the water and IMO, a tendancy to panic easily (every one is liable to panic at some point) is a contraindication to diving and maybe even other things like driving a car, rock climbing or whatever. At least part of this just has to do with how we're put together. I can tell stories about lots of students but I remember when I first got a chance to dive...I had wanted to ever since I first saw it on TV as a child.
I didn't start diving in a class or a pool. My cousin, who was a fairly new OW diver, had some gear and we took the boat out to a nice little cove. I got in first, put my gear on and he told me to go down just under the surface and get used to breathing on the reg. I was so excited and amazed at what I saw that I wandered off alone and had the time of my life. It was a resevoir and a very unusual year. the water was about 25 ft higher than normal, clear as air and there were whole trees in full foilage under water. I didn't even think about heading back until I was gtting low on air. Boy, was my cousin MAD! Stupid maybe but no fear and no hesitation. It would have taken the daddy of all sea monsters to get me to panic... or even get me to notice. I take that back, I would have shot him with my spear gun and put him on a stringer. After all what could hurt me? It was just water and I'd been a swimming fool since I could remember. My cousin tried for years to get me to go get certified. I thought it was the most rediculous thing I had ever heard of. I could swim and I could breath and why would any one need a class to do both at once. It was about ten years later that I finally went to get certified and I did more than a few dives inbetween.
That's one end of the scale. You might be on the other. I doubt I would have gone on if diving wasn't about the most amazing thing I'd ever been near enough to touch. We can overcome a lot in life with diligence and hard work but I don't get folks walking around the house wearing a diving mask. On my first dives, I didn't even know that you could clear a mask underwater. Once it flooded (and it did because none of them I had to use fit me) I just kept going with it flooded or took it off and got it out of the way. I'd been swimming underwater all my life and never had a mask. I figured I didn't really need it anyway and who would want one since they just flooded.
Maybe no one will get what I'm trying to say. Diving was amazing for me but it sounds like some kind of bizzare torture to you. Except for owning a dive shop and some of the things I've seen happen to other people, I have nothing but unbelievable memories from diving. If I die on a dive someday, I might even say that the whole thing was still worth it. What do you expect to gain from diving that'll make all this worth what you're going through? I mean it doesn't sound like you've had the least bit of fun yet. You don't sound like you're in a hurry to get down there to see what's been hidden from you all this time. You just sound like your forcing yourself.
Diving is marketed as being fun and safe for the whole family. It is fun but it isn't always safe and the fact is that like 1% dive and 5% would like to...according to some PADI numbers that I once saw. That leaves 95% who could care less and 4% who think they might like but may never actually do it. That's 99% of folks who are not scooting around underwater sucking on a reg. Do you think there might be a reason for that? I mean you can get certified for the cost of a cheap TV and now days folks have one of those in every room so it isn't the money.
I'm sorry. I wish you all the luck in the world but I don't get it.
As far as my 11yr old being certified. I was a bit nervous at first but he is very carefull.
He actually did better in his course than the adults. He was more focused & alert than them. He even aced his written. My husband doesn't allow him more than 50ft my husband is his buddy always. He also pays attention to his dive computer.
Our instructor has been diving/instructor for over 30 years & I wouldn't have allowed my son if he didn't feel he was ready. He also would not have certified him. Ray is extremely strict & thorough. He doesn't allow short cuts.
Thanks for your concern.
Training standards prohibit an instructor from taking an 11 year old deeper than 40 ft. I guess dad can take him as deep as he would like and who knows he may very well be a more capable supervisor than the agencies think their instructors are.