How to Prepare for Your First Freediving Pool Competition

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You don’t need to be fearless.
You don’t need to be the strongest, deepest, longest.

You just need to be ready.

And not the kind of ready that’s all adrenaline and pressure.
The kind of ready that comes from quiet, deliberate work. A slow build of trust between you and your body.

1. Talk to Someone Who’s Done One

If you know someone who’s competed before—ask them.
Ask them what surprised them. What helped them. What they wish they’d known.

There’s a kind of wisdom that only comes from walking the walk.
Lean on that. Borrow their calm.

2. Get a Coach (Even for a Short Time)

A good coach doesn’t just tell you what to do.
They tell you what not to do.

No wasted training. No spirals of doubt. No overreaching for ego’s sake.
Just clear feedback. Clear structure. A way forward that feels like support.

If you’ve read my piece on patience and progress, you know how much I value doing less, better. A coach helps you do that.

3. Don’t Overtrain

Freedivers are notorious for this.
We love the suffering. We love the push.
Until the push breaks us.

It doesn’t have to be like that.

More volume isn’t better. Especially close to comp. Overtraining can sabotage your performance, raise your anxiety, and make you dread the very thing you once loved.

Trust that less can be enough.
Sometimes the win is just showing up.

4. Arrive Early, Breathe Easy

If the comp requires travel, don’t cut it close.

Give yourself a few days to settle. Let your nervous system catch up. Sleep well. Eat well. Walk the venue. Breathe the air.

That extra time can mean the difference between a smooth performance and a flustered one. Between being present and being overwhelmed.

There’s science behind this, too—studies on psychological readiness in athletes show that acclimation time reduces stress markers and improves performance.

5. Set Attainable Goals

This is not the Olympics.
This is your first pool competition.

Talk to your coach about what’s realistic. Choose goals that feel like growth—not punishment.

Your first comp is not where you prove yourself.
It’s where you meet yourself, in new conditions.

Bonus: Read the Rules (But Don’t Obsess)

There’s a briefing before every AIDA competition. You’ll get walked through the protocol, the safety steps, the surface rules. You won’t be left guessing.

Still, knowing the basics helps. I broke them down simply here.

And the most important rule?

Have fun. And maybe look good in the photos.


Also read: Dynamic or Static? Which Pool Discipline Is Right for You?.

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