There are two basic routes - become an dive-leader and thereafter instructor, or join a commercial firm, working wind-farms, oil rigs etc.
Both need qualification and experience.
Yes, Just continue doing what you do, and follow the path to be a professional diver.
A professional sky-diver.
The Professional Association of Diving Instructors (PADI) is the largest diver training organization in the world.
Assuming that by 'amateur diver' you mean a recreational diver without any professional qualificaitions, the recommended limit as determined by PADI (Professional Association of Diving Instructors) is 18m (60ft) for an Open Water diver, 30m (100ft) for Advanced Open Water and 40m (120ft) for a Divemaster. BSAC (British Sub Aqua club) sets the limits as 20m (67ft) for an Ocean Diver, 30m (100ft) for Sports Diver and 50m (165ft) for Master Diver. So in answer to your question, no, you couldn't 'swim where the water pressure is more than 65 ps' unless you were a technical diver or a BSAC qualified diver, as at 165ft the pressure is around 69ps.
scuba diver, lifeguard, underwater recovery, underwater conscruction, professional swimmer.
The options as to where one can apply for a job as a diver would vary depending on ones location. There are options to apply for a job as a diving instructor, or one may find other jobs listed in ones location. Sites such as Indeed have listings for jobs as a diver.
they were there but did not diver or get an award nor pass one out so dose that anwer yals qustion
A diver that competes in the Olympics or a diver that has competed in past Olympics.
well there is more than one!
Gravity always acts as a pair of forces, not as one single force. The strength of the forces depends on both masses, not just one of them. The forces of gravity attract the diver toward the earth and the earth toward the diver. The forces are equal in both directions. If the diver weighs 150 pounds on earth, then the earth weighs 150 pounds on the diver. The diver accelerates toward the center of the earth with an acceleration equal to (weight)/(diver's mass), and the earth accelerates toward the diver with an acceleration equal to (weight)/(earth's mass). Has that helped, or just confused the issue further ?
Beatrice Armstrong passed away on March 12, 1981. She was a former professional diver. She competed in the Olympics twice in her lifetime.
One can purchase a Seiko diver watch from Amazon, the largest online retailer. For better deals, you can also go to Ebay where you will likely find cheaper prices.