Life's a journey: scuba diving | members only access

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Life's a journey: scuba diving | members only access"


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Diagnosed in my 30s, my panic disorder was just something I’d learned to live with. I tried to avoid situations that I knew put me at risk of an attack, and carried my prescription


medication in my purse for when one came on regardless. And many of my triggers — feeling trapped, claustrophobic, unsafe and unnerved by something unknown — were exactly those I now faced.


So while I’d wanted to explore the ocean’s depths since my first snorkeling expedition in my 20s sparked an addiction to coral reefs and Technicolor fish, I’d always waved the idea away,


assuming diving was off-limits. And as I’d gotten older, learning to dive seemed to recede farther out of reach. In fact, PADI statistics show that less than 2 percent of those undertaking


dive certification are women over age 60 — a distinction I would reach in a matter of weeks. And yet, it felt like there was a momentous force propelling me to learn to dive. I was seeking a


challenge. But not just any challenge — something so difficult that achieving it might rewire my sense of the possible. I needed to take on something that I was almost absolutely certain I


couldn’t do. And then do it. Because that’s what I’d done just a year before. I’d left the man I’d lived with — though never married — for 19 years. A man I’d assumed to be my final life


partner, until his rage and need for control became a tyranny I could no longer live under. In the last years, I’d drifted like a ghost through my own life, isolated by shame from family and


friends and armored in numb denial until I could no longer fail to see the damage. I got out, and I reminded myself over and over again that the strength it took to escape could also help


me rebuild. But, as it turned out, it was far easier to rebuild the trappings of my life than it was to reconstruct my shattered sense of self. Eroded by gaslighting and excoriating


criticism, I had little trust in others and almost none in myself. What I needed, I felt, was something to help me batter down the wall of self-doubt. Obtaining her scuba diving


certification helped Haiken conquer her fears and find inner strength. Courtesy: Melanie Haiken FINDING THE FAITH “I believe you can do it.” Those were the words Carol spoke when she agreed


to let me try the final dive again. And I held on to them as I descended and again went through the motions of the task that had triggered the panic attack. And I did it, awkwardly, and with


my mask only partially cleared, but able to breathe through my nose and give Carol the OK signal. And with my faith in myself reestablished, the rest of the required demonstrations went


easily. The certification checklist complete, we had time and oxygen enough to do one more dive “just for fun.” Down we went, venturing through a series of lava tubes and coral-studded


grottoes known as Sheraton Caverns. Suddenly, I felt a tap, and turned to see Carol gesturing excitedly into a deep crevice. Guided by her flashlight, I peeked under a ledge to see a small


whitetip reef shark  staring sleepily at me from the shadows. Excitedly, we made “Isn’t he cute?” faces at each other, and I found myself doing an absurd little happy dance with my arms to


show Carol just how giddy I felt to be deep underwater, a place I’d never thought I’d get to be.


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