For many people, a frightening encounter with the ocean becomes a reason never to return.
For Elsie Gabriel, it became the beginning of a life’s mission.
Long before she became an internationally recognized ocean educator, conservation advocate, and adaptive diving trainer, Gabriel was a curious teenager spending her holidays along the coast of Puri in Odisha. Drawn to the mysteries of the sea, she spent countless hours observing the natural wonders of India’s eastern coastline from the ancient horseshoe crabs that have survived for over 450 million years to the spectacular nesting journeys of Olive Ridley sea turtles.
Family trips to Chilika Lake introduced her to playful dolphins and thriving coastal ecosystems that would ignite a lifelong fascination with marine biodiversity.
But one experience nearly changed that story forever.
While swimming in rough waters as a teenager, Gabriel was caught in powerful waves that repeatedly pushed her beneath the surface. For several terrifying moments, she struggled to regain control and find her way back up.
“I remember the panic vividly,” she recalls. “The ocean suddenly felt immense and overpowering. Even after I was safe, that fear stayed with me for years.”
Many would have walked away from the sea.
Gabriel chose to understand it.
Years later, determined to confront her fear rather than be defined by it, she enrolled in scuba diving. What began as a personal challenge evolved into a profound transformation.
“Scuba diving taught me that fear and wonder can exist in the same place,” she says. “The moment I descended beneath the surface and saw coral reefs, fish, and entire underwater ecosystems thriving around me, my relationship with the ocean changed forever.”
Today, Gabriel is a certified adaptive diving professional, trained through organizations including HSA USA and PADI, and has become a leading advocate for making the underwater world accessible to everyone.
Through her work in Accessible Ocean Tourism and marine education, she has helped train dive professionals and support programmes that include individuals with physical disabilities, seniors, neurodiverse participants, and people with cognitive challenges.
Her work has taken her across some of the world’s most celebrated diving destinations, including the Maldives, Sri Lanka, Goa, Kerala, the Andaman Islands, and Lakshadweep, where she has promoted inclusive diving practices and ocean literacy.
But for Gabriel, accessibility is about far more than physical access.
Increasingly, her focus has turned toward young people facing anxiety, trauma, stress, and mental health challenges.
“We live in a world where many young people feel disconnected from nature, from community, and sometimes from themselves,” she explains. “The ocean offers something unique. It invites us to slow down, to breathe, and to reconnect.”
Scientists continue to study the psychological benefits of blue spaces natural environments associated with water and growing research suggests that time spent near oceans and marine environments can contribute to reduced stress, improved mood, and greater emotional well-being.
Gabriel has witnessed these effects firsthand.
She has seen hesitant participants gain confidence after their first snorkeling experience. She has watched young people struggling with self-doubt discover a sense of achievement underwater. She has observed how marine environments encourage mindfulness in ways few other settings can.
“Underwater, there are no notifications, no noise, no pressure to perform,” she says. “You become fully present. You focus on your breathing, your surroundings, and the incredible life around you. That experience can be deeply healing.”
For Gabriel, the ocean’s therapeutic power is not simply about saltwater or its natural mineral composition. It is about connection to nature, to biodiversity, and to something larger than ourselves.
Whether watching a sea turtle glide effortlessly through the water, observing a coral reef bustling with life, or encountering a school of fish moving as one, she believes these moments have the power to shift perspectives and inspire hope.
Her message to young people is simple: the ocean is not only a place to visit it is a place to learn, grow, heal, and even build a future.
Through ocean literacy programmes, conservation initiatives, citizen science projects, and accessible diving opportunities, Gabriel hopes to inspire the next generation of marine researchers, conservationists, educators, and ocean advocates.
“The ocean gave me back something I almost lost as a teenager confidence,” she says. “Today, my mission is to ensure that every young person, regardless of their physical abilities, neurological differences, or personal challenges, has the opportunity to experience that same transformation.”
As the world searches for solutions to both environmental and mental health challenges, Gabriel believes the answer may lie in an unexpected place.
Beneath the waves.
“Protecting the ocean and healing people are not separate goals,” she says. “When people fall in love with the ocean, they want to protect it. And when they spend time in nature, they often discover strengths within themselves they never knew existed.”
For Elsie Gabriel, the journey from fear to freedom began with a single wave.
Today, it continues with every life she helps transform through the power of the sea.
Elsie Gabriel is the International Director HSA USA and has contributed to the Venice Declaration on ocean literacy and is the UNESCO Green Citizens as well as the National Cordinator oceans for climate reality project India/Asia and has founded Accessible ocean Tourism through her research.