Which Freediver Are You?

People come to freediving for completely different reasons, and one of the nicest things about teaching it is watching someone discover which kind of diver they actually are. There's no single right answer. The sea is wide enough for all of them.

The Spearo comes for the hunt, but stays for the patience. This is the diver who wants a relationship with the sea that ends in something real — a meal, a story, a connection to an old Mediterranean way of living. They learn quickly that spearfishing rewards calm and knowledge far more than aggression. The best ones are quiet, selective and deeply respectful of what they take.

The Explorer comes for the places. Gozo is one of the most spectacular underwater landscapes in the Mediterranean, and the Explorer wants to see all of it — the Blue Hole, the caves and arches at Dwejra, the sunken ferries off Cirkewwa, the sheltered clear water around Comino. For them, freediving is a passport. Every dive is a doorway into somewhere most people will never see.

The Athlete comes for the progression. They like the numbers, the technique, the structured training blocks, the feeling of a clean dive done well. They're chasing depth or breath-hold or simply their own previous best. There's nothing wrong with ambition underwater, as long as it's matched by discipline and safety. For the Athlete, freediving is a craft to be refined, one metre at a time.

The Spiritual seeker comes for the stillness. They may not care about depth at all. What they're after is the silence, the meditative drop in heart rate, the sense of coming home to themselves a few metres beneath the surface. Many arrive stressed and leave lighter. For them the sea is less a sport than a teacher.

Here's the thing we've learned after years on the water: almost nobody is purely one type. The Athlete discovers stillness. The Spiritual seeker gets curious about a wreck. The Spearo starts diving deeper just to see what's down there. The reasons blend and shift over time, and that's exactly as it should be.

This is what Be Water really means. You don't have to decide who you are before you arrive. You stay fluid, you let the water show you, and you find your own reason for being there. Then you follow it as far as it takes you.

So — which one are you? You might already know. Or you might only find out once you're floating at the buoy, taking that first slow breath.

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Keeping Spearfishing Sustainable

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Be Water