i think there's a deeper philosophical issue here - at that's whether we consider it important to feel that we 'belong' down there for those few short minutes. isn't freediving meant to be about man being in some sort of 'harmony' with his underwater environment? (slightly fluffy language but i'm sure you know what i mean.) personally i think you should be able to go down and come up without any ill-effect, and go home feeling great! if you can't do that then you weren't really in 'harmony/equilibrium' with your environment. i think there can come a point where you stop being a freediver and essentially become an underwater stuntman. (but even professional stuntmen wouldn't take such risks and allow themselves to become injured in that way!)
i know these types of diving injuries/incidents happen from time to time to most freedivers, but the important difference is whether you accept them as being a normal and routine part of freediving. as we go deeper we'll probably have to battle with these philosophical issues more and more. there's no right or wrong of course. ultimately i think regulations will have to get tougher regarding these things otherwise deaths are absolutely inevitable and freedivers will develop a public reputation as being dangerous lunatics. (many see us this way already!) having record freedivers surfacing half-dead on live TV is not going help the public perception of freediving.
i know these types of diving injuries/incidents happen from time to time to most freedivers, but the important difference is whether you accept them as being a normal and routine part of freediving. as we go deeper we'll probably have to battle with these philosophical issues more and more. there's no right or wrong of course. ultimately i think regulations will have to get tougher regarding these things otherwise deaths are absolutely inevitable and freedivers will develop a public reputation as being dangerous lunatics. (many see us this way already!) having record freedivers surfacing half-dead on live TV is not going help the public perception of freediving.