THE PSYCHOLOGY OF
SCUBA DIVING
I am not
a diver; at least, not yet. I am excited to learn to dive and yet a little bit
nervous about the whole process.
There
seems to be so much to learn about how the body reacts to pressure and the mix
of gas in the diver’s tank.
It made
me very curious about the kind of personality that is drawn into this “extreme” sport.
It seems
that divers take up the sport at various ages, from childhood into their “twilight” years, and for various
reasons; however, it seems that only a small percentage of people who become
certified divers will continue to enjoy the sport throughout their lifetimes.
According
to one instructor, it is about five percent. Which leads to the question: “WHY?”.
INTERVIEWS
I
interviewed several divers, from basic open water divers to instructors and
industry professionals; I asked them why they dive and what diving does for
them.
The
answers were as varied as the divers’ personalities.
One
teenager, Sarah, says that she enjoys it because it gives her the opportunity
to do something with her father and she feels “accomplished” after a successful
dive.
She earns
bragging rights because most of her friends are not divers.
Matthew,
age 18, has been certified since he was 13 years old and primarily dives as a
family activity – his parents and two brothers are also divers.
He states
that he loves diving because he loves the ocean and it’s fun and interesting to
see what’s underneath you in the water.
Sal, a
28-Year-Old Dive Master, calls diving the “ultimate
freedom.”
He says
that even when you’re with a dive buddy, you’re basically alone because the
buddy might not be really paying attention.
Forty-Seven-Year-Old
Coz states, that diving is the closest that human beings can get to actually
flying.
“You’re so free to be at whatever ‘altitude’
you want, and swoop down on things deeper than you,” he told me.
Johnny, a
mental health professional, dives for the relaxation and peacefulness that he
feels in the water.
J.B., age
51, says he does it because there’s no one down there complaining or yelling;
it’s quiet and the diver is by himself.
He says
that diving is calming and relaxing; while Forty-One-Year-Old
Tony says that diving is the ultimate peace.
“You’re down there, face-to-face with God’s
great creations that we weren’t born to live among, in their environment. God
gave us this way to experience this,” he said.
Peter, an
instructor with decades of scuba experience, started as a commercial fisherman
who had to learn to dive in order to perform certain duties of his job, but now
he dives because “it’s really calming to
just focus on what you’re seeing and let everything else just go away,” he
says.
He
teaches it because he wants other divers to be as safe as possible. Thomas is
also an instructor with long experience; he began diving as a father-son activity
and fell in love with the sport.
Like so
many of the others I talked with, he finds peace and freedom beneath the waves.
Sean, a
scuba professional, always loved the water; he says that growing up, if he was
near a body of water, he was determined to find out what was in it.
He says
he has always been fascinated by marine life and that when diving, “you’re
exploring, and it’s incredible.”
RELIEVING
STRESS AND ANXIETY
While
scuba diving is considered an extreme sport because of the potential for injury
and possible death, it does not attract only Adrenaline Junkies.
People
from all walks of life –every race,
socioeconomic background, ethnicity, religion, and gender– are drawn to the
sea.
Or
beneath the sea. Psychologically, recreational divers seem to be no different
from people who do not dive, with one exception: divers seem to have realized
that this sport is an excellent outlet for reducing stress and anxiety.
It is a
temporary escape from the cares of daily life – just ask almost any diver.
Among
adult divers, there seems to be an underlying theme of peace and freedom as the
primary reasons for engaging in Scuba Diving even though a 2008 study showed
that the top 3 motivators for divers to engage in scuba were for fun, to be
with similar personalities, and to explore and see marine wildlife (Lusby and Cottrell, 2008).
All the
divers I spoke with suggest that when they dive, they find a quietness that
exists nowhere else; they find peacefulness that cannot be found in daily life.
And while
this “extreme” sport can be
dangerous, it is also liberating, peaceful, relaxing, and fun.
One might
suggest that there is something almost magical about the underwater world and
something freeing about the sport of scuba diving.
by: Karen Pietrantonio
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