5/11/2020 0 Comments 10 CovenantsBeing underwater is a magical place. It can bring out feelings and emotions inside of us that we have sheltered away for decades. Done the right way, the experience of bettering yourself underwater can elevate your daily terrestrial life as well.
Some education focuses on getting you certified to dive as fast as possible with a need for equipment solutions. However, to really find peace underwater and within yourself, you will need a philosophy that does more than get you below the surface solely reliant on technology. By knowing who you are and why you do what you do will take you to that next place underwater, a place that is also inside of yourself. We define ourselves with these 10 Covenants The Unified Team. There is a big difference between having a dive buddy underwater and having a teammate. Teammates work and practice with each other, they sweat and struggle and improve together and lift each other up. Diving is no different than any other team sport in that regard and the benefits are limitless to who you become as an individual and a friend. The Thinking Diver and teammate. The overwhelming majority of scuba education is focused on teaching you to follow the dive master and do what they say. Even at the advanced levels, it is a certification to follow the dive leader a little bit deeper. We teach a philosophical base that promotes thinking and responsibility. Every diver knows the situation, the planning, the hazards and the resources and never simply “trusts” someone else to get them home. Rock Bottom Gas Management. Breathing underwater always has the possibility of an out-of-gas emergency. Trusting big brand names and more expensive gear will only set you up for failure at some point in diving. Starting with the assumption that this can and might happen on every dive you make will force you to start the dive with the gas needed to safely get you and a teammate home if the situation does arrive. Additional having a thinking teammate instead of an unassuming buddy, reinforces the safety of both of you involved. Standard Gases. Breathing air underwater has physiological effects on the human body. For decades most scuba education has evolved to deal with the negative effects and reduced the time and depth limits. But today we have enough knowledge and wisdom to simply breathe the appropriate gas for any given depth to eliminate the narcosis, density and toxic reactions humans can encounter while breathing at depth. Knowing the science is essential to our philosophy. A Consistent and Modular Equipment Configuration. The diving industry is full of trendy gadgets and new equipment designs that market themselves as easy solutions to diver shortcomings. This equipment may look and feel wonderful but often is limiting in many other ways as the diver grows more comfortable, desires change, and interests evolve. Our configuration is based around the end goals and applies a consistent template that works at every level of experience. Scaled from the beginner to the highest level of deep explorer without every having to change the foundation application of emergency procedures. Minimalism. Diving is an equipment intensive sport. Often divers are sold all different kinds of tools to take underwater to improve skills, add safety, extend exploration. But it can be overwhelming and hazardous to take with you too much extra gear, especially if it is hard to reach, difficult to find and dangerous to deploy. We focus on only taking with you what you will need for the specific dive you are making. Cleanliness and efficiency, along with the ability to skillfully use everything you bring is more important to having a bunch of equipment that you can’t realistically use. A Holistic Approach. Researching the best wheels and tires, the best windshield, best seats, best muffler, best transmission, best brake lights, pistons, radiator, radio, etc. might technically give you a car that cannot be built, even though each peace by itself makes sense. Having a system that all works together and a way of thinking that links everything form what you are breathing, to what you are wearing, suits and fins; along with a reason, design and placement is more valuable than just having the top brand of each individual piece. Streamlining. Often you will see divers with an abundance of accessories clipped to their gear. Equipment clipped on to more equipment that hanging from other equipment. This creates a sloppiness in the water and increases drag, resistance and the divers work of breathing to move through the water. Our configuration demands and expects a clean and streamlined form that is usable and accessible. All components are stowed away when not in use and easily deployed when needed. Situational Awareness. Diving is equipment intensive. Diving requires learning new physical skills and techniques. Diving puts your human body into a new three-dimensional environment. Diving forces you to communicate with teammates without talking, raising your voice or tone. Managing all of this and being able to keep your head up and mind all-seeing are key elements to making a safe and thinking diver. This management of equipment, environment and team are the essence of situational awareness. Training and Experience. All of our courses include experience dives where the students take control and dive to the level of their new training. Most education guides the student through new skills and leaves them on their own to really get the experience they need. This can be intimidating and counterproductive. It can also be dangerous as it may set the assuming diver up to dive beyond their ability. It is important to have the appropriate training for the planned dive and a consistent set of protocols and sills to manage hazards. Experience is the confidence builder after the training is complete.
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James Mott
James has been a PADI instructor since 1998 and was one of the original 10 instructors for UTD Scuba Diving in 2009. Archives
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