SCUBA Theory: Holding your breath is a skill
Posted Apr 17th 2006 8:17AM by Will O'Brien
Filed under: SCUBA Theory
"Don't hold your breath" is a mantra heard in virtually every scuba diving course every taught. You can easily
damage your body during ascention by holding your breath during SCUBA diving. The expansion of the air can quickly cause
damage regions with very few nerve endings to tell you that you're doing bad things to yourself. Today in SCUBA Theory,
why breath holding is a valuable skill to practice.
That's not my weight belt
Hear me out before you start thinking about how buoyant I'd be with an extra fifty
pounds of lead. The most dangerous thing a diver can experience under the water is panic. If you stick the average
person under water, in about thirty seconds they're going to be getting worried about their next breath of air.
Especially if they've been swimming. The truth is that the average person can be fully functional under water for a
couple of minutes without any fresh air.
Feel the burn
Our brain tells us to exhale when the carbon
dioxide level in our lungs reaches a certain threshold. After thirty seconds have passed, we really want to start
breathing again because that threshold has been met, and likely surpassed. Keep at it long enough, and you'll really
start to feel uncomfortable. The important consideration is that we decide to breath based on CO2 buildup rather than
the lack of oxygen in our lungs.
Eternityschmernity
Thirty seconds is a relatively short period of time.
If you experience an out of air situation, it'll will feel like an eternity. It's very likely to take you at least
thirty seconds to determine if you need to get air from your buddy, to swim over to him in full gear, signal that you
need air and receive assistance. In that situation, staying calm keeps you from making mistakes. Being comfortable
under the water is important, especially when a diver is under duress.
Get skinny
Practicing skin
diving skills that involve breath holding in the pool is a great way to increase your water comfort and confidence. You
should NEVER hold your breath while scuba diving, but practicing it while skin diving is can help you become a better
SCUBA diver. Increased water comfort means increased ability to handle duress under the water.
Go jump in a
... pool
I keep a set of skin diving gear - mask, snorkel, fins and weight belt just for pool work. This keeps the
chlorine off my good diving gear and I just keep them ready to use in the back of my car.
Test
yourself
Place your fins on the bottom of the pool and stick your weight belt on top of them. Now leave your mask
next to them. On one breath of air, descend, put on your gear, clear your mask, and ascend. This little task can take a
while. You'll float upward until you put on your belt, and when you pick it up your fins may try to escape. Try it in
the shallow end first, but once you've got it down head to the deep end of the pool.
You loco?
If you're
hurting to pull off the task above, my favorite workout designed to help is called the locomotive. Wearing a mask, fins
and snorkel (hopefully a suit too) swim laps. Halfway down the lane, descend a bit and swim as much of the rest of the
length underwater as you can. When you ascend, clear your snorkel and keep going. Using your arms to increase your
oxygen burn can really increase the effectiveness. The locomotives will push you to deal with your CO2 tolerance
threshold. Doing four to eight locomotive laps during three or four pool sessions will start to make a difference.