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How top cave diver Jill Heinerth keeps calm under pressure

Jill Heinerth describes how she avoids panic when things go wrong underwater and one terrifying night — on land — when she learned how to handle fear and survive.

'Emotions, you won't serve me now,' says Heinerth about how she handles panic underwater

Canadian cave diver Jill Heinerth inside a 350,000 year old cave on Abaco Island in the Bahamas. (Jill Heinerth)

It could be tempting to assume, after more than two decades in one of the riskiest jobs around, that cave diver Jill Heinerth is fearless.

In fact, the Ontario native feels fear every time she descends into an underwater cavern — and that`s a good thing.

"I enter the water scared," said Heinerth, who last year was named the Royal Canadian Geographic Society's first explorer-in-residence.

"It's important for me to embrace that fear, because that tickling sensation on the back of my neck is self-preservation"

Heinerth has been nearly trapped inside an iceberg in Antarctica, and travelled deeper into underwater caves than any other woman.

Here's how Heinerth handles the fear to get out alive and describes one terrifying night — on land — when she knew she had it in her.

Marine explorer Jill Heinerth, seen here with Stellar sea lions near Hornby Island, B.C., in February, was named the Royal Canadian Geographic Society first explorer-in-residence. (Jill Heinerth)

What's the worst that can happen?

Inside a cave, which Heinerth describes as "swimming through the veins of Mother Earth," many things can go wrong.  

She could get lost, unable to see from silt clouding the water. She could get stuck or run out of air to breathe, several kilometres from escape.

Rather than ignore these risks, Heinerth says she imagines every one before she dives.

"What's the worst that could happen today?" she asks herself, then runs through scenarios like a checklist.

"I'm prepared. I have the technology. I know what to do," she tells herself.

"That way, when I actually enter the water ... I've sort of freed my mind of all of those negative thoughts."

Heinerth diving in the Bahamas. (Courtesy Royal Canadian Geographical Society)

What can I do next?

When something scary does happen, Heinerth says the first thing she does is try to control her stress response.

"Your heart starts to race. You begin breathing faster, and that's the last thing that I can allow to happen to me underwater with a limited gas supply," said Heinerth.

"I have to ... get control over my breathing, I have to take a deep breath and say to myself, 'Emotions, you won't serve me now' and I have to send them away.``

Then, she "works within the moment" as time seems to slow. Even if escape is uncertain, she looks for her next best step.

Cave diver Jill Heinerth on learning to act despite fear

8 years ago
Duration 2:30
Heinerth describes a terrifying night she fought off a burglar and learned about staying calm under pressure

It's something Heinerth said she realized she could do after, as a university student in Toronto, someone broke into her apartment and came after her.

"I'm lying in bed, and my heart is jumping out of my chest," she recalled.

My rational brain ... said no, don't throw a brick at him because then it's his brick- Jill Heinerth

"I need him to know there's someone in the house and I don't want to use my female voice to do that."

Instead, she began stomping around her room, making noise and looking for a weapon to defend herself.

She eyed a brick holding up her student bookshelf.

"Already, my rational brain was starting to act, and it said no, don't throw a brick at him because then it's his brick."

She grabbed two X-Acto knives from her drafting table and stood shaking, ready in case he came at her — which he did.

She slashed him, and he laughed at her, then ran away.

"It's this tangle, this tug of war between the emotional brain and the pragmatic brain," said Heinerth.

"How long can you swallow that down in order to survive? That's what I learned that night and I've carried that with me ever since and into every cave that I've ever gone diving into."

Person explores a wreck
Jill Heinerth explores the wreck of the Sweepstakes in Big Tub Harbour near Tobermory, Ont. (Submitted by Jill Heinerth)

Listen to the CBC Radio special Keep Calm on the science of business of handling stress, or read more in the series here:

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Lisa Johnson

Senior Writer & Editor

Lisa Johnson is a senior writer and editor at CBC News. She helped create CBC Radio's What On Earth, which won the 2021 Canadian Journalism Foundation Award for Climate Solutions Reporting. She has reported for CBC on TV, radio and online with a specialty in science, nature and the environment. Get in touch at lisa.johnson@cbc.ca.