Water presure doubles every 33 feet. Water presure doesn't actually double every 33 feet. It actually increases in pressure by one atmosphere every 33ft. Thus at 33ft the pressure would be twice what it is at the surface. At 66ft however the the pressure would be three times that at the surface... 99ft, 4 times and so on.
You would blow up from water pressure.
As you dive deeper into the water, the pressure increases because of the weight of the water above you pressing down. For every 33 feet (10 meters) you descend, the pressure increases by one atmosphere. This increase in pressure can compress the air spaces in your body, such as your ears and lungs, which is why scuba divers need to equalize as they descend to avoid discomfort or injury.
As someone descends through a water column, the pressure increases. This happens because water at higher levels exerts weight on the lower layers of water.
As you descend in the water column zones, water pressure increases, light diminishes, and temperature typically decreases. Different marine life and ecosystems are adapted to specific water column zones based on factors like light availability, temperature, and nutrient levels.
temperature decreases
As you descend deeper underwater, the pressure increases due to the weight of the water above you. For every 33 feet (10 meters) you descend, the pressure increases by 14.7 pounds per square inch (1 atm). This increased pressure can affect your body, SCUBA equipment, and other objects at depth.
your ears pop your ears pop
At 30 meters depth in salt water, a diver will experience a pressure of approximately 4 atmospheres or 4 times the pressure at the surface. This is because water exerts 1 atmosphere of pressure for every 10 meters of depth.
It pervents the water pressure from killing the diver
At 4 meters below the sea level, the pressure exerted by the water column above the diver would be approximately 0.4 atmospheres higher than atmospheric pressure at the surface. Therefore, the expected pressure of air in the diver's lungs would be the sum of this increase and atmospheric pressure.
This is mainly do to the pressure that the water above the diver is putting on the diver. On the surface air is putting pressure on you but it has less weight than water and as you dive deeper the pressure increases because the amount of water above you also increases.
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.