How to Support Your Diving Buddy Through Performance Anxiety
Performance anxiety is real in diving—whether it's a competition, certification exam, or challenging dive. Here's how to recognize it and actually help.
How to Support Your Diving Buddy Through Performance Anxiety
Your buddy has trained for weeks. They've logged the hours. But now, hours before the dive—the competition, the exam, the moment that matters—they're spiraling. Racing thoughts. Nausea. Self-doubt: "What if I embarrass myself? What if I fail in front of everyone?"
Performance anxiety in diving is more common than most divers admit. Whether it's someone preparing for PADI Advanced certifications, a freediving competition, or a challenging environment dive, the emotional weight can be as real as the physical challenge. The good news: anxiety means they care. The challenge: unchecked anxiety can sabotage performance and shake confidence long-term.
If you're the friend being leaned on, you don't need a sports psychology degree. You just need to recognize what's happening, know what actually helps (and what doesn't), and be present. Here's how.
Recognize the Difference Between Nerves and Panic
First, understand that nerves aren't the enemy. Mild anxiety sharpens focus and reaction time—a diver with zero anxiety might be overconfident and dangerous. The problem emerges when anxiety tips into panic: rumination, catastrophizing, and physical symptoms like trembling or shortness of breath that won't settle.
When your buddy says they're "anxious," ask clarifying questions. "Is this nervousness or genuine fear you'll panic?" "Are you worried about judges' opinions, or your own performance?" These distinctions matter because the fix is different. Nervousness responds to preparation verification and reassurance. Fear of embarrassment is psychological—it needs perspective, not logic.
What to Actually Say (and What Never to Say)
Do say:
- "You've trained for this. I've seen you nail X, Y, Z." (Concrete reminder of capability)
- "Nervousness is normal. I feel it before my dives too." (Normalization)
- "This one dive doesn't define you as a diver." (Perspective)
- "What specifically scares you about it?" (Let them articulate; it shrinks the fear)
Never say:
- "Don't be nervous, you'll be fine." (Dismissive; makes them feel weird)
- "Everyone will judge you." (Confirms their fear)
- "Just don't think about it." (Impossible; worsens intrusive thoughts)
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