#1633
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My wife is very claustrophobic. It took a lot of time to get her to even try snorkling. My son is the same way. Neither are able to get past the feeling of the water closing in around them. I have seen alot of people able to get over it with the proper training, but I would really be sure that you can by maybe working in a pool alot before you commit yourself to the open water. Panic is the worst thing that can happen at depth. I would think that by working in the pool you should be able to overcome your fear. If you have to close your eyes until you are under the water I am not sure that is to good a thing and should be overcome before you venture any further, for your own safety.
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#6504
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I’ve seen some that can get past being claustrophobic in clear water but can’t handle bad viz. I would be sure to get in lot’s of pool time before venturing out.
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#138
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Thank you for your advice(s)! I will focus on working with my instructor, and see what advice he has for me. I was just wondering if other divers have developed internal coping strategies to address this. The last thing I want to do is to freak out - I want to overcome this - I want to dive.
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#746
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Rochelle,Looks like some great advise so far. Plenty of pool time is the answer. My first dive many years ago was with my Brother who was in the Navy. I just got to the bottom of the ocean and he pulled my mask off me without warning. I must say the result was not nice. It was a long time before I tried diving again. I do like to assist new divers to be very relaxed in the water. I find sitting on the bottom of the pool with your mask off and breathing at your own pace helps overcome anxiety. Try it, you will be surprised how much it can help. Do this many times before you start your course. You will also get to practice mask clearing at the same time. Start slowly. Flood your mask slowly then a lot whilst controlling your breathing. Take it off then put it back on and clear it. Keep breathing and do this a lot of times gradually extending the time without a mask. Master this before you get into open water and you should be fine. Good luck to you and go slow. It will happen.
When you are ready enjoy your diving. You should love it as much as I do. Ken
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#1633
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I wish you all the luck in the world. I believe that we can overcome anything. I have had people who are certified but never been on a boat dive freak out as soon as you are out of sight of land, and others who needed me to hold their hand as soon as we left the anchor line become totally absorbed once they started seeing all the sea life and completly forget about their phobias so I know it they can usually be conquered. You just have to put everything into perspective :-) And again good luck
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#1358
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Rochelle, I was a terrible OW student. Ken gave you great advice when he told you to spend lots of time in the pool. My instructor let me do my OW pool sessions three times in a row. (In hindsight, he couldn’t have asked for a better problem-child student to train his dive master candidate.) When I started, I couldn’t sit at the bottom of the shallow end. I actually had to stand and just blow bubbles with my face in the water. My first instructor told me I was the worst student he’s ever seen but he predicted that if I stuck with it, I would be a good intructor. His prediction came true and I’m still diving and have been teaching for three years. Sometimes I’m still nervous but I’ve even gotten to the point where I have tried cave diving (it’s okay but not my thing). The biggest thing is to be patient with yourself and I hope you have found an instructor who is even more patient (if not, find someone else). Then you’ll always want patient, more experienced dive buddies who don’t mind if you hold their hand in rough, murky or whatever other water conditions you don’t like. You’ll get there eventually. It took me about 70 open water dives before I felt like I hit my stride. In the meantime, if you get nervous it helps to close your eyes for a bit, focus on your breathing and just remind yourself that as long as you have plenty of air, you can work through any problem or anxiety you have underwater.
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#2812
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My wife too was concerned about feeling that way, and in truth had a few scary moments in our initial check off dives. She got a clear mask as opposed to a black one and that seemed help. Over time she has become more comfortable and is now a dive master, so keep on diving!
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#1459
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I’m not easily scared, but a lot of apprehension went along with my first 30’ dive It seemed like 100’ to me. Only the amazing sights on the reef took my mind off the gear and at that point the gear seemed to almost disappear and I was hooked. So, I guess what I am saying is that claustrophobia aside, using the equipment can be a bit daunting. As others have said a lot of pool time is the way to go, it will help you relax in the equipment. I also hyper-ventilated like mad the first time I used the regulator. Hopefully, given enough time it will all come together for you.
Good Luck jg
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#251
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Good advice offered so far and I agree. My wife has claustrophobia and knew she wanted to get certified after a Discover SCUBA class as well. We found a dive shop with a pool onsite that would let me work with my wife 1 on 1 so she didn’t have the pressure of other students around as she learned. She spent close to 2 months in the pool 2 nights a week until she was totally comfortable and had her skills down solid.
As we transitioned her to open water we made her first dives shallow, 15’-20’ feet max, so that she could go deeper than the pool but still see all the concepts are the same as in the pool. We are slowly increasing her depth still, not rushing anything, and she has made dives to 35’ so far and is still doing fine.
There is plenty of time for diving so take your time and don’t rush anything.
Michael
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#138
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From RockRat2008: Good advice offered so far and I agree. My wife has claustrophobia and knew she wanted to get certified after a Discover SCUBA class as well. We found a dive shop with a pool onsite that would let me work with my wife 1 on 1 so she didn’t have the pressure of other students around as she learned. She spent close to 2 months in the pool 2 nights a week until she was totally comfortable and had her skills down solid. As we transitioned her to open water we made her first dives sh... Very well stated ... for me, it ended by taking very small baby steps. I was determined to discover what the root cause of my panicky feeling was, eventually realizing that it was water by my nose. I posted a request for help on this forum to ask more experienced divers how to overcome this fear of mask removal. I received so many good ideas, that I compiled all the ideas into a step-by-step document and started in. From sitting in my tub and just putting nose in the water for 5 sec to being able to pass my OW certification by removing/replacing my mask, took me daily ‘training’ for three weeks. The first breath after going under the water line and the feeling of descending into ‘nothingness’ in open-water, may always cause my heart to initially jump – but once I’m at depth (current record is 23ft) I feel free. Please tell your wife she’s not alone – there are others like us who are willing to share their experiences too. One step at a time … in the end, it’s so very, very worth it! If I can oversome this... what else can I overcome!
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