The surface looks inviting, serene even—until you realize how much of the real action happens beneath. Years ago, a friend dared me to hold my breath longer than a goldfish—a challenge I clearly lost. Little did I know this funny moment would stick with me through every deep breath, every plunge, and every nervous laugh on deck before a dive. It's this element of surprise and discovery that defines Performance Freediving International (PFI). From Hollywood legends to local heroes, PFI draws an eclectic crowd—all bonded by the drive to test their limits, guided by Kirk Krack's canny expertise and a vibrant, safety-obsessed crew. Let's crack open what really happens when you trade the surface for depth—sometimes with world champions, sometimes with everyday thrill-seekers, always with plenty of stories to tell.
Section One: PFI’s Cast of Characters (And What They Teach Us)
The Unlikely Roster: Who Shows Up at PFI?
It’s not every day you find Tom Cruise, Margot Robbie, and a U.S. Special Forces operator in the same classroom. But at Performance Freediving International (PFI), this is just another Tuesday. The list of students reads like a Hollywood afterparty—James Cameron, David Blaine, Red Bull extreme athletes, rescue teams, even everyday folks who just want to see what they’re made of.
Celebrities and champions—from Tom Cruise to David Blaine—choose PFI for a reason.
Red Bull extreme athletes and U.S. Special Forces alike rely on Kirk Krack’s instruction for different high-stakes challenges.
Each diver, famous or not, brings a story, raising the question: What draws such a diverse crowd?
The Magnet: Kirk Krack’s Reputation
Kirk Krack, founder of PFI, is a name whispered with respect in both Hollywood and military circles. When the stakes are high—like filming underwater stunts or prepping for a rescue mission—people want the best. And they come to Kirk. His approach? It’s not just about breaking records or holding your breath a bit longer. It’s about safety, humility, and pushing past what you thought was possible.
'Experience matters.' – Kirk Krack
Numbers That Tell a Story
Since 2000: Over 10,000 students taught
23 world freediving records set by PFI trainees
Course depth safety: Instructor always within 15ft/5m
Unexpected Lessons: When Fame Meets Fear
There’s a story that floats around PFI circles. One day, a movie star—let’s just say, someone used to being in control—panicked underwater. It happens. But what’s wild is, the person who helped him regain composure wasn’t a seasoned pro. Nope. It was a rescue diver-in-training, someone who’d just learned the ropes. That moment? It was humbling. Fame, it turns out, doesn’t matter much when you’re thirty feet down and out of air.
Why Do They All Come?
Maybe it’s the promise of adventure. Or maybe it’s the way PFI blends challenge with humility, competition with camaraderie. The curriculum flexes for everyone—from total beginners to world-class athletes. And in the water, everyone’s equal. Well, almost. Some just have better stories to tell at dinner.
Section Two: Safety Over Ego—The True Deep Dive Mindset
Where Bravado Ends and Real Freediving Begins
They say the ocean doesn’t care about your ego. At Performance Freediving International (PFI), that’s more than a saying—it’s a rule. Every dive, every breath, every heartbeat is measured. There’s no room for shortcuts, not when the stakes are this high.
Uncompromising Protocols—No Exceptions
Every dive is supervised. No matter if you’re a first-timer or a Hollywood A-lister. The instructor? Always within 15 feet (5 meters). Always watching, always ready.
Every breath is calculated. Safety isn’t a checklist—it’s a living, breathing part of the dive. Protocols evolve. Standards get tougher. That’s just how it is.
Stories from the Deep—Close Calls and Calm Minds
Ask around and you’ll hear stories. A student panics, loses focus for a split second. The instructor’s right there—no drama, just action. Sometimes, these strict standards are the thin line between a good story and a tragedy. There’s even a rumor that PFI’s protocols helped keep Tom Cruise safe for a blockbuster underwater stunt. True or not, it’s believable. That’s the level of care.
Quality Over Quantity—Why Numbers Don’t Matter
It’s not about how many divers pass through the program.
It’s about making sure every single one comes back up.
Certifications aren’t handed out for just showing up. Instructors must meet evolving, strict standards—every time.
PFI doesn’t chase market share. They chase confidence, safety, and skill. That’s the real currency here.
The Dive Mindset—Calm Over Bravado
There’s a lesson that goes beyond the water. The best freedivers aren’t the loudest or the boldest. They’re the calmest. The ones who know that panic is the real enemy. That mindset—steady, focused, humble—works just as well on dry land. Maybe even better.
“When you feel safe in the water, you’ll be blown away by what you can achieve.” – Kirk Krack
PFI’s mission isn’t about being the biggest. It’s about being the best—one safe, confident diver at a time. The ocean rewards those who respect it. PFI just makes sure you’re ready to earn that respect, every single dive.
Section Three: The Many Faces of Freediving—Courses for Every Kind of Adventurer
Not Your Average Classroom
He walked into the pool expecting a group of eager beginners. Instead, he found himself flanked by a rescue diver on one side and a filmmaker on the other. That’s the PFI way—no two classes are ever the same. From spearfishers with sunburned noses to surfers chasing the next big wave, and even the occasional Hollywood stunt double, the lineup is always a surprise.
Why One Size Never Fits All
PFI doesn’t do cookie-cutter. They know that every adventurer brings a different story, a different goal. Some want to hold their breath just a bit longer while snorkeling. Others? They’re aiming for world records, or maybe just to survive a wipeout under a monster wave. It’s not just about going deeper—it’s about going deeper for your own reasons.
Spearfishers sharpen their instincts and safety skills.
Surfers learn to stay calm when the ocean turns wild.
Rescue teams and special ops train side by side with everyday explorers.
Even entertainment pros—think actors and stunt people—join the mix.
Unexpected Lessons in Unlikely Company
There’s something wild about watching a rescue diver and a big wave surfer swap stories during a break. They come for different reasons, but in the water, they’re equals. Sometimes, they even learn more from each other than from the instructor.
One day, a rescue team might pick up a tip from a spearfisher about reading currents. The next, an aspiring underwater filmmaker finds herself learning breath control from a Navy diver. The curriculum? It bends and flexes, always adapting to the group’s needs.
Courses for Every Level and Background
Beginner Freediver: For those just dipping their toes in.
Intermediate & Advanced: For the curious, the bold, and the slightly obsessed.
Instructor & Competition Training: For those who want to teach or push limits.
The backgrounds are as diverse as the ocean is deep—civilians, military, entertainment, rescue. Sometimes, it’s hard to tell who’s who once the wetsuits are on.
Freediving is more than competition—it’s a journey inward to see what you’re made of.
– Kirk Krack
That’s the magic of PFI. Their courses are as varied as their students, always challenging the norm, always sparking unexpected collaborations. And sometimes, that’s where the real adventure begins.
Section Four: The Ripple Effect—How Freediving Changes Life on Land
From Ocean Depths to Everyday Heights
It starts with a single breath. That’s all. But for those who’ve trained with PFI, that breath becomes a bridge—one that carries courage from the deep blue back to the surface, and then far beyond.
1. Stories That Surface
There’s the accountant who, after conquering her fear of open water, left her cubicle to photograph whales in the wild. Or the firefighter who learned to stay calm underwater, then found himself leading rescue teams through smoke and chaos, steady as a stone.
Some students say they walked into PFI courses timid—afraid of the unknown. They walked out ready to take on new jobs, wild adventures, or just the daily grind with a grin. It’s not magic, but it’s close.
2. The Mindset Shift
Freediving isn’t just about lungs and legs. It’s about learning to pause in the middle of chaos. To hold your breath when everything screams for panic. That skill? It sneaks into life on land.
Boardrooms: When meetings heat up, PFI alumni breathe slow, think clear, and lead.
Busy streets: The same calm that keeps a diver safe at 100 feet helps them dodge city stress.
Creative pursuits: Writers, artists, and musicians say their focus sharpens after freediving. It’s like their brains learned to tune out the noise.
3. A Superpower, Sort Of
Learning to freedive is a bit like discovering you can fly—except you start by holding your breath. Suddenly, everyday problems seem smaller. Traffic jams? Just another chance to practice patience. Big presentation? Breathe in, breathe out, dive in.
'The PFI dive mindset gets results.' – Kirk Krack
Lasting Impact, Far Beyond the Water
PFI-trained divers hold dozens of national records. But the real records are set in daily life—confidence, focus, and the guts to try something new.
Their alumni network stretches from sports to emergency services, creative arts to business. Each story different, but the ripple is always there.
Whether someone sets a world record or just conquers their nerves, PFI’s brand of freediving leaves a mark. It’s not just about the ocean. It’s about who they become when they come back up for air.
Section Five: Cookies, Privacy, and the Surprising Parallels to Freediving
He never thought a website cookie policy would remind him of freediving. Yet, there it was—another pop-up, another decision. Accept or refuse? It felt oddly familiar. Like the moment before a dive, when he checked in with himself: How deep today? How long? What’s safe, what’s not?
Limits: Digital and Aquatic
Understanding cookies on a website is weirdly similar to understanding your limits underwater. Both are about boundaries. On the web, cookies tailor the experience, just as a good freediving coach tailors training to each diver’s comfort and safety. He realized, maybe a bit late, that every browser and device needed its own cookie reminder. Just like every dive—no matter how many he’d done before—needed a fresh safety check. There’s no “set it and forget it” in either world.
Self-Awareness: The Key to Both Worlds
Privacy choices online echo the importance of self-awareness and informed decision-making in diving. What you allow, what you refuse, and why. He sometimes wondered if he was overthinking it. But then, in the water, a single careless moment could mean trouble. Online, a careless click could mean…well, who knows? Maybe nothing. Maybe a lot. The sense of anonymity online—browsing without revealing your identity—mirrored the inward focus he felt during a breath-hold. A private journey, but with boundaries you set for yourself.
A Playful What-If
He laughed at the thought: What if websites tracked your max breath-hold? Would there be a leaderboard? Would he opt in, or keep that number to himself? Some divers would love the bragging rights. Others, not so much. It’s a silly idea, but it gets at something real—how much of ourselves we choose to share, and when.
Intentional Choices, Lasting Impact
Making intentional choices—whether in a browser or underwater—is what keeps experiences positive and safe. PFI’s approach to both diving and privacy is simple: Respect boundaries, make informed decisions, and learn with every new experience—whether digital or aquatic.
He knew, deep down, that every dive and every click was a chance to learn. Sometimes the lessons were obvious. Sometimes they snuck up on him, disguised as cookie pop-ups or the quiet pressure of the deep. Either way, the journey—online or underwater—was his to shape, one choice at a time.