
50 Terrifying Pics To Show Why The Fear Of Deep Water Is Real, As Shared On This Online Group
Thalassophobia is a persistent and intense fear of deep bodies of water such as the ocean or sea. What makes this phobia different than aquaphobia — the fear of water in general — is the fact that it centers on vastness, darkness, and depth. People who have this condition are not terrified of getting wet, but rather the might and mystique behind the waves.
While thalassophobia is not recognized as a distinct disorder by the DSM-5, the diagnostic manual of mental disorders used by psychiatrists and other mental health professionals, it's still relatively common. And the subreddit of the same name is a vivid example of that. Created in June 2013, it unites 969,000 thalassophobes, sharing triggers and discussing symptoms.
So, in an attempt to shed some light on this community, we at Bored Panda decided to put together a list of their most popular posts.
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Kayaking With The Giants!
Grand Turks 700 Ft Drop
Online groups that get this big often suffer from huge streams of content that flood them with questionable pictures and videos, diminishing the overall experience of browsing them, but this subreddit manages to stay clean. Part of it can be attributed to the clear rules that promote being nice and courteous, and allow no jokes, memes, or cartoons, no reposts, and no gore.
But of course, having an active moderator team that make sure members adhere to these rules helps tremendously as well.
We contacted the moderators of 'Thalassophobia' and they were kind enough to have a little chat with us.
"Our core mod group has 4 active members, which is a small team for a subreddit of our size," they told Bored Panda. "Compared to other subreddits of our size, we don't feel like we police posts or comments as much. The reason we do so little policing can probably be explained by our subreddit's niche context that revolves around a very specific set of inoffensive content. We're just a bunch of people sharing stories, images, and videos of bodies of water that leave us in awe, wonder, and trepidation. Whenever we do police content, it's usually because it's a repost or focuses on a sea creature rather than the vastness of the ocean or the unknown depths of a body of water. We prefer for the ocean/water to play the primary role in content."
Orcas In The Waves
This Seaweed Through Clear Water
Underwater Waterfall
I saw this picture and my anxiety just got turned up FULL BLAST
The mods said the 'Thalassophobia' community is very passionate and filled with both ocean-fearing and ocean-loving people. "Based on previous polls we've had in the subreddit, it's split roughly 50/50 between those [two groups]."
"Although half of the community loves the ocean, everyone understands that there are people with a phobia of large/deep bodies of water and everyone is respectful of that in their posts and comments. It's a great community to be a moderator in," they explained.
Specific phobias tend to fall into these five categories:
- Animal type;
- Blood-injection type;
- Natural-environment type;
- Situational type;
- Other.
Thalassophobia is usually considered to belong to the natural-environment type. These fears are experienced more frequently, with some studies also suggesting that water-related phobias are more common among women.
"Uhhhh, There's More Than Just Kelp And Angelfish Down Here, Over"
British Underwater Photographer Of The Year Winner 2022
Words Fail Me
Is To Me Or Are Black Tiled Pools Terrifying
Thalassophobia shares symptoms with other specific phobias, such as claustrophobia, and includes:
- Sudden onset of anxiety or fear;
- Shaking and trembling;
- Sweating;
- Dry mouth;
- Increased heart rate or heart palpitations;
- Difficulty breathing, including hyperventilating;
- Chest pain;
- Fear of losing control.
Taken Off The Coast Of Southern California 2 Weeks Ago
The Pacific Ocean
Thatās Creepy
The Deadliest Stream In The World - It Looks Normal, But Underneath It Is Full Of Caves Of Powerful Fast Moving Water That Will Drag You Down. 100% Fatality Rate
The causes of specific phobias, including thalassophobia, are not entirely understood, and often differ from case to case. But according to a common explanation, it's usually a combination of genetic and environmental factors.
Research shows that certain genes are associated with certain specific phobias, but as of yet no studies have looked at the genetics behind thalassophobia in particular. However, following the Darwinian theory of evolution, there should still be at least some.
āThe Big Oneā
When You Fear Of Flying And Your Fear Of Water Meet Each Other
Beach Weather Is Upon Us!
The Eye Of S(E)auron.
Think of it like this: our ancestors also came across deep bodies of water, and those who were cautious of the dangers they possessed may have avoided them, living longer to pass down their genes. This theory is supported by research that indicates that specific phobias are moderately heritable.
Although the exact percentage can vary, it has been found, for example, that for animal phobias, heritability is around 45%.
A Howling Abyss
Deep Water Swell
An Entire Street Submerged In The Deep
Underwater Path. Magical Zakynthos Caves, Greece
Thalassophobia could also be caused by traumatic events, such as a childhood near-drowning experience, witnessing a shark attack, never learning to swim, or even being told scary stories of the ocean.
By associating a specific situation, such as being in deep water, with a panic response, over time a phobia of that situation can develop.
Because All My Friends Say This Photo Of Me Freediving Gives Them The Willies
Start adding dark shapes in the backgrounds when you show them pictures. Items like Thomas the trains face, rubber duck, sushi rolls Cthulhu are common items that you could sneak in
Storm Coming Soon
Could That Be The Megalodon's Den?
Taken From A Fishing Boat In Antartica
Phobias are chronic conditions that can worsen over the course of life and limit one's relationships and activities. The good thing is that they are also highly treatable, although the process isn't always pleasant.
But only about 10-25% of people with a specific phobia ultimately seek help. This is likely due to avoidance behaviors, since treating a specific phobia does often involve confronting the feared stimuli.
The Image That Started It All
Jacob's Well In Texas
An Abandoned, Flooded Mineshaft
Guadalupe Island, The Most Terrifying Place On This Planet
Exposure therapy is a popular and effective choice for treating specific phobias, including fear of the sea. During it, a person faces their feared stimuli in increasing levels of intensity.
For someone with thalassophobia, this might start with looking at photos of the sea on this subreddit, escalate to watching videos of the ocean or deep water, then visiting a big pool and taking a trip to the ocean. Through controlled exposure, the person learns that the feared stimulus itself is not dangerous, and they can begin to associate it with more positive outcomes.
Thereās Something Particularly Terrifying About The Idea Of Water You Canāt Even Float In
They put these signs on the aeration tanks at water purification plants. While there have been a few people who have fallen in and drowned, whether or not aeration would cause a human not to float hadn't really been tested until more recently. It turns out humans can float in an aeration tank, and it's now thought that those who drowned died of other complications. They still keep the signs up, though, since the tanks are still dangerous in general, and also because they're full of icky water that no one should really want to be in.
The Bottom Of An Iceberg
Whirlpools Are Actually Terrifying, You Guys
Swimming Next To A Ship In The Open Ocean, Miles From Land
That dude in the middle- is he drowning? Is he calling out for help? Is he waving to the camera? Is he voguing?
A Diver Riding A Giant Underwater Worm (Pyrosoma Atlanticum)
Brine Pools Are Just The Scariest Shit
Apparently This Is The Sunken Goddess Sculpture- Thatās All I Know But Look At How Big It Is!
Walked About 30 Minutes Out During Low Tide To Read This!
This Is An Under-Ice Observation Tube In Mcmurdo Station, Antarctica
Depth: Infinite Ft
Kids, whose ready to go on the bottomless pit water slide? It feels like it never ends!
This Grounded Ship Looking Like A Giant Meg
Anybody Who Wants To Take A Dip?
Row Row Row Your Boat
That Last Point Made Me Double Take
Fresh Water Always Creeped Me Out More Than The Ocean. The General Low Visibility And Feeling "Enclosed" With Whatever Was In The Water Was Always Gnawing At The Back Of My Mind.
Hah the myth about that particular dolphin. They are shapshifting tricksters that will try to drown you and turn you into a dolphin and then morph into you and take your place in your family.
This Would Scare Me Tf Out
Flip (Floating Instrument Platform), A Ship Flipping Vertically To Study The Behavior Of Sound Waves Underwater
Going Through Old Pics, Thought I Would Drop This Here
Just a friendly shark debating if they are worth a selfie. (Upper right look for dark shape)
Black Lined Pools Are A Thing⦠And Theyāre Terrifying
It's A Nice Peaceful Day Until You Get A Glimpse Of What Lies Beneath
Found This Gem On Tumblr
Note: this post originally had 142 images. Itās been shortened to the top 50 images based on user votes.
I found these pictures mostly beautiful and calming. Water is my element.
Same here. Now l just want to go swimming!
Same! I love the water!
For me, they are fascinating and exhilarating.
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If you can't touch the bottom it doesn't matter how deep the water is. Never understood why someone thinks swimming in a 100' deep water hole is more frightening then swimming in an 8' deep hole. Granted there's more likely to be a mega monster in the 100' foot but that's usually not what people claim to be afraid of. So many just say nope it's too deep... can't see the bottom... I guess it's all perspective.
I definitely have this phobia, and for me it isnāt depth it is absolutely ācanāt see the bottomā which means āI canāt see what might be below meā. I have been scuba diving in very deep but very clear ocean water and it was fine. I have done swims across a small freshwater lake where I KNOW the biggest creature is no threat to me, and my brain staring into the infinity below me starts hallucinating giants just out of sight below me. I think it is that humans arenāt used to having āfrom belowā as a direction of potential threat. Add in that anything down there would be completely silent as it approached and my brain just starts sweating in my skull. So much nope.
I have the same thing. It's not the depth but the inability to see where it ends.
Human imagination is both wonderful and terrible!!! Good point about threat direction. Glad you've enjoyed diving. I love it.... but my best dives were night dives. I'm guessing you wouldn't enjoy those so much. For me getting in the water at night was the hardest part but once in... pure magic!!
YES! Its when I cant see the bottom.
I feel like Iām gonna fall. Like Iāll just lose buoyancy and down Iāll go
At least in the 8ft pool I can see the bottom and I can see what is there...generally, except for other swimmers, there shouldn't be anything else alive in it.
6' or 6000' - all the same
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The pictures of the sea creatures are absolutely stunning and humbling. Our planet is amazingly breathtaking ā¤ļø
As I learned recently, and this list just proved, I am a massive thalassophobe.
Me too. Love walking the beach, but don't like being over or in deep water.
Somebody explain this, please. A āphobiaā is an IRRATIONAL fear of something. How is Thalassophobia even a thing? Why would any land-dwelling creature NOT have a proper heightened awareness of a deep water situation and not stay on guard against a potential mishap? What am I missing in all this?
Because people suffering from this can have reactions from mild uncomfortable to peeing themselves with fear. Ever went swimming? Ever noticed that some people NEVER go swimming?
Phobias are fears that have escalated to cause the individual significant distress and/or negatively impacts their ability to function as "normal". It's a normal fear, but when it gets to the point that a person is strongly triggered by images alone, it would be considered a phobia. TLDR: It's not the fear itself that is irrational, but the degree to which it impacts a person.
Honestly the deep ocean terrifies me
I will just⦠leave the ocean the heII aloneā¦
There are irrational fears and common sense. The ocean isn't a swimming pool, it can be very dangerous. Tourists come to Cape Cod and swim straight out into the ocean. Not in a Protected Area where the life guards are, but in a random location. Most are not strong swimmers. They are not visible from shore much sooner than they realize. Cape Cod's shark population has dramatically increased, there are other large sea creatures, and unexpected currents. Locals swim stay close to shore line. They aren't afraid, they respect the strength of the ocean and the creatures who live there.
harvey water again harvey-3-6...2e9235.jpg
I remember that hurricane! Hated living in that.
water from hurricane harvey got all the way up to my front doorstep... no water in the house... the houses on either side flooded... harvey-2-6...273f7c.jpg
My house almost flooded, but somehow the water went back down before it got inside.
Why did I look. WHY
Scary and fascinated at the same time!
I might have that thassalaphobia thing now. I never thought i did but now i got some palps.
Iām terrified of deep water, especially when I canāt see far in it, but Iām also a terrible swimmer, so I donāt think fear is so out of place! I grew up around a swimming pool, and could never get the hang of treading water or floating on my back, so if Iām stuck in the water I have to actively swim to keep afloat. That keeps me out of anything other than a swimming pool.
I tried to go through this article so many times, but my brain just said "Nope". Never made it past #15.
There is some great stuff in here. But why is it intermixed with artwork and photoshopped pictures?
All these pictures are making me shrink up and close my eyes. :,)
these photos are terrifying only if you suffer from thalassophobia, the title is misleading.
I am surprised there werent any pics of the sandbar area of cape disappointment. Sea is so rough there the nearby coast guard stations goes there to purposely capsize their self-righting boats for training lol
I find oceans to be nice and clear when Iām not on a boat. Oceans on earth are measly compared to those in the solar system and beyond
The ocean pics were scary, but what scared me more were those black tile pools. WHY do that to a pool? It just makes something that was inviting into something scary. I dunno, maybe it's just me.
Lovely and fascinating. Deadly and frightening. All of the emotions. The guts of some people who explore the deep are to be applauded! Mars was overcome by the ocean zillions of years ago through their climate change and then the salt evaporated leaving a toxic situation that humans could never breathe. Maybe we should continue to explore our own planet before wasting millions on one that is just a shot of how we are to end up?
Dark blue water is kinda frightening. Murky muddy water as well. Fear of anything being able to approach you because you're in the water. Doesn't help when I'm barely able to float and slow.
This post made me extremely anxious and terrified. I regret this scrolling session.
WHY did I do this to myself?? WHY did I look at all, and, more importantly, WHY did my dumb Ć ss look right before bedtime??? God, please don't let me have nightmares!!!
Dear BP, Could you please put titles on each of your pictures to explain where they were taken?
Hanauma Bay Hawaii. Very large shallow coral bay covered in sand. Beautiful, lots of sea life. If you walk around the bay to the ocean, it drops off. I don't know how deep, but it is pretty startling. Can't find pics of the drop off.
These just make me want to go diving this weekend, am probably going any way, now I just wanna go more.
Now I just wanna go diving this weekend.
Oh great, and it's actually bedtime here, thanks.
why no garbage patches or oil spills?
When i got to the bottom of this I realized I was holding my breath. That was stressful!
I'm a coastal girl, it's not the ocean or deep water I fear. Things lurk below, I get it, the unknown doesn't bother me. I hate is being trapped. The images of people under icebergs?! NO THANK YOU!
I grew up swimming in an abandoned Quarry, they hit water and flooded. You could still see the old machinery as you swim to the other side of the lake, it was very eerie but also very cool. You also had to walk through and abandoned mini town to get there, there was an old gas station, and the rest was swallowed by nature.
For me it starts with my smallness in the vastness, then you add the not being able to see the bottom...and all the creatures...I used to scubadive 30+ years ago...jumped out of perfectly good airplanes, climbed Mt Fuji several times, rappelled off cliffs on Cheju'do...too...I am still trying to figure out why
I think I have the opposite of this problem. I find out of these beautiful and very inviting. Especially stairs down into water.
Pshaw. Grew up on the Atlantic Ocean. (Massachusetts Bay). Spent ten years fishing, and my highlight was swimming with whales at Stellwagen Bank - 40 miles out to sea and in 230 feet of water. No big deal, in all honesty.
First time I read the comments in between the pictures. Interesting facts.
When I went swimming in lake Thun I always tried to forget, that it's more than 200m deep and should I drown I'd likely never be found š but it's beautiful nonetheless.
I think most of those are photoshopped beyond reason.
Yeah, itās a shame. Some of them are Photoshopped into oblivion like the one with the skull appearing in the ocean waves and yet some people still believe the images are real and get even more scared of the ocean.
TIL that I have Thallasophobia, so thanks for that.
This entire thread triggered some major anxiety. I never knew I was this fearful.
What happend to the other pictures? There were many more.
Go to the end of the thread, where it says "Note: this post originally had 142 images. Itās been shortened to the top 50 images based on user votes.", and click on the number '142'. This will bring you to the original, extended post. The additional photos that didn't make the cut start at item number 51. Enjoy!
I can swim I deep water at home in the US Great Lakes, but not in the ocean. I think of large fish as about 3 ft/ 1m. A fish should not be larger than me. I'll stay where I can see the bottom and see what's around me, thanks.
I can sort of understand where the fear comes from, maybe it's fear of being attacked by some sea creature, maybe it's just that being in deep water can make you feel incredibly small. Personally, the feeling of being a tiny piece of a very large world is humbling in profoundly beautiful way. It's one of the reasons I fell in love with surfing.
Homestead Crater, Midway UT -- warm water cave diving at its best. Warm, nothing gonna bite you, benches set into the water like a hot tub for those who don't dive. Peaceful and beautiful.
I must confess, none of these would bother me, with the possible exception of the waves with the seaweed. When I did a Swimtrek tour a few years ago, I found myself swimming over scuba divers at one point who were at least 10 metres below me. I almost waved at them before I realized that they wouldn't see it. I love the water despite falling into a creek that was over my head at age 4 or 5. Or maybe because of that?
I found these pictures mostly beautiful and calming. Water is my element.
Same here. Now l just want to go swimming!
Same! I love the water!
For me, they are fascinating and exhilarating.
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I make more then $12,000 a month online. Itās enough to comfortably replace my old jobs income, especially considering I only work about 11 to 12 hours a week from home. I was amazed how easy it was after I tried it⦠š AND GOOD LUCK.:) HERE====) www.fuljobz.com
If you can't touch the bottom it doesn't matter how deep the water is. Never understood why someone thinks swimming in a 100' deep water hole is more frightening then swimming in an 8' deep hole. Granted there's more likely to be a mega monster in the 100' foot but that's usually not what people claim to be afraid of. So many just say nope it's too deep... can't see the bottom... I guess it's all perspective.
I definitely have this phobia, and for me it isnāt depth it is absolutely ācanāt see the bottomā which means āI canāt see what might be below meā. I have been scuba diving in very deep but very clear ocean water and it was fine. I have done swims across a small freshwater lake where I KNOW the biggest creature is no threat to me, and my brain staring into the infinity below me starts hallucinating giants just out of sight below me. I think it is that humans arenāt used to having āfrom belowā as a direction of potential threat. Add in that anything down there would be completely silent as it approached and my brain just starts sweating in my skull. So much nope.
I have the same thing. It's not the depth but the inability to see where it ends.