Thursday, January 15, 2009

Fear Conquering & Scuba Diving

From GypsyNester.com

Now that the chicks are out of the nest I'm nurturing a new side effect--fearlessness. Okay not exactly fearlessness, but I'm finding that I'm more drawn to crazy antics than I used to be. Perhaps this effect is common in empty nesters--or at least with the baby boomer ones. Were we not the VW bus driving, world-changing, stickin' it to the man, try-anything generation? There must be some latent drive lurking beneath my ex-helicopter mommy exterior--and dammit--it's getting my attention. So I crammed my not-so-perky butt into a wet suit, strapped 16 pounds of weight around my waist (apparently I'm very buoyant) and jumped in. And immediately FREAKED OUT.

There I was in the ocean, treading water like a madwomen, embarrassed and humbled. What happened? I aced the pre-ocean part of the lesson. In the swimming pool I was amazing--a scuba diving machine if there ever was one. I was practically one of those Discovery Channel shark chasers. My mind frantically tried to grasp where things went terribly awry...

On the boat I was excited. I even had built-in inspiration. A couple in their freaking 70s taking on a 100 foot dive with three generations of their family. My new heroes -- maybe I could be one of their kids for the day. I was in awe.

We dropped anchor and the septuagenarians headed down (with their REAL children -- the heartless brats) leaving us newbies behind. The strapping on of the paraphernalia got underway. Before long, I stood there with an air tank on my back (air is WAY heavier than one would think), a weight belt and an extremely binding vest with fifty bazillion tubes hanging off of it. Overwhelmed, the meaning of the tubes started to escape me. Led to the edge of the boat in flippers with little peripheral vision because of the mask I was wearing, I began to unravel. This was not cool.

I switched on my panic mantra (people do this everyday and do not die, people do this everyday and do not die...) and jumped in. Needless to say, after making it down about a whopping five feet, I gave the distress signal (the only thing I remembered from the swimming pool) and was hoisted back onto the boat like a defeated whale. Not my finest moment.

The kindly boat captain and I became fast friends as we sat alone for 45 minutes while everyone else was having the time of their lives. I was angry, jealous and resolute. Luckily, this was a two-tank drive. I had another chance and I wasn’t going to blow it.

The elderly couple (who I now hated with every fiber of my being) climbed out of the sea like Jacques Cousteau and started talking (with my husband, no less) about all the fabulous creatures they saw. Now I was REALLY angry, jealous and resolute. Apparently, this is the very mindset I needed to be in.

I jumped in again and down I went along the safety rope. My instructor, the very patient Shelly, stayed right in my face. I was petrified, but I was determined (people do this everyday and do not die...) terror would not win this time. Reaching the end, I clung to the bottom of the rope like it was my job. At this critical point I realized that my main fear was that I was sinking when I normally would be floating. Being a control freak, this wasn’t sitting well with me at all. My brain was telling me that if I let go of the rope I would continue to descend slowly until I was stuck forever on the ocean floor. I had forgotten that I had fins, strong legs and a capable instructor. I let go.

Shelly took my hand and lead me to a sting ray hiding in the sand. Kneeling close by this strange and beautiful creature, my Darth Vader breathing noise transcended to a calming yoga-like hum. The ray, deciding it wanted nothing more to do with us, got up and "flew" away. I gave chase. I hadn’t even realized that my fear was gone. I was one with the ocean.

Next step--certification. And, just maybe, I'll have my own Discovery Channel shark chasing show--all I have to do is punch the mean ones in their noses, right?

Veronica, GypsyNester.com

7 comments:

Anonymous said...

Congratulations Gypsy! Your reaction was not that unusual for a first-timer....and besides you overcame your fear!! So now you've proved that you can beat that inner beast (panic). I was a Master Diver for many years and helped lead many trips of newbies...I've seen just about every reaction you can think of.

Unfortunately, I burst an eardrum several years ago (on a dive)..I got it fixed enough that I can still swim, but it ended my diving career....it was a great pastime for my wife and children and I still miss it. I hope you continue and get your certification! Good luck to you.

Anonymous said...

I sooo love this story! I thought I was the only one who "got in over my head" (so to speak) in new projects and experiences, lol. You go girlfriend! };->

Anonymous said...

Tell me, people do this everyday and do not die? :)

Anonymous said...

Way Cool---You Go E-Nester!!

Anonymous said...

I enjoyed reading about your adventure. I live in Austin TX, and we have an abundance of outdoor activity. Last year after watching people kayak in Town Lake I decided I wanted to also. My son and daughter -in-law and Irented a three person kayak. We started off up stream and I was really enjoying it, however I thought we were moving awfully slow for three people. Then my son realized that I was dragging my legs in the water. It was rather refreshing to me. However I was the dead weight, so at his suggestion I put my legs on top and off we went. I loved it we were cruising along very quickly. And then when we heading back we were really moving. At the end I was exhausted but exhilarated. The following weekend I rented a kayak for myself. I rented it for an hour. I headed off full of confidence and headed down stream, i was determined to get as far as I could in a half hour and then return. So off I went I made it to my destination in just the right time, I turned the kayak around and headed back. Much to my dismay the current heading upstream was very strong. My kayak kept trying to go the other direction. I was starting to reach the panic mode. I paddled with all my might , streams of sweat running down my face my arms cramping. Finally I reached the dock. I had no energy to dock the kayak and I ran right into the dock up over it and back into the water. An amused young man helped me to dock and drag myself out. I was pretty deflated. However I still loved it and plan on kayaking often this summer. My grand daughter wants to go along as well, however this grandma needs to build up more muscles before i dare take her.

Mary Anne Nagy said...

Congratulations! I think I'd enjoy traveling with you guys very much. I just spend an hour and a half talking to someone from California (where I lived for 15 years before 3 in Fl and had to move to CT) - she was trying to sell me something, but we ended up talking forever. OH HOW I MISS THAT OPENNESS. So different in New England. Happy trails!

Kate and Pam said...

Kate: The edge I had on you, was watching a group come out of the water every Wed after school. They dove and did the post-dive discussion in front of me. I was SICK with jealousy before my first effort.

If you're in the Islands for Christmas, do a few dives. The more you do, the more you get that yoga-breathing thing down. It's like the best meditation ever.

Never take it for granted - we (my husband/buddy) practice our skills a couple of times a year. It's a dangerous sport.

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