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I've been a pilot for 12 years now. I've been married (this time) for 10.
Three years ago, the DE who passed me on my private and instrument tickets died in a stupid accident. My wife had met him a few times at flying club dinners and around the airport. A few weeks ago, a club member who she'd also met several times died in his float plane, a plane that I'd flown in a few weeks before that. He died with his best friend, a former club member who I knew a bit but whom my wife didn't. Now that two people she's met have died flying in a relatively short period of time, she's getting less and less secure about my own flying. Every time I head out to the airport, she gives me the talk. "Be careful. Don't die. If you have the slightest doubt, come back." Etc. And so on. I don't think she'll tell me to stop, because she knows I was a pilot before we married. But what can I do to reassure her? The pilot community is pretty small, and losing three people associated with our little club is pretty scary for her. At one time, I thought when the kids were finished college I'd finally have enough money to buy a share in a float plane and we could have some adventures together. Now I'm not even sure she'd come flying in a club plane. -- Paul Tomblin http://blog.xcski.com/ ....I'm not one of those who think Bill Gates is the devil. I simply suspect that if Microsoft ever met up with the devil, it wouldn't need an interpreter. -- Nick Petreley |
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Paul Tomblin wrote:
I've been a pilot for 12 years now. I've been married (this time) for 10. Three years ago, the DE who passed me on my private and instrument tickets died in a stupid accident. My wife had met him a few times at flying club dinners and around the airport. A few weeks ago, a club member who she'd also met several times died in his float plane, a plane that I'd flown in a few weeks before that. He died with his best friend, a former club member who I knew a bit but whom my wife didn't. Now that two people she's met have died flying in a relatively short period of time, she's getting less and less secure about my own flying. Every time I head out to the airport, she gives me the talk. "Be careful. Don't die. If you have the slightest doubt, come back." Etc. And so on. I don't think she'll tell me to stop, because she knows I was a pilot before we married. But what can I do to reassure her? The pilot community is pretty small, and losing three people associated with our little club is pretty scary for her. At one time, I thought when the kids were finished college I'd finally have enough money to buy a share in a float plane and we could have some adventures together. Now I'm not even sure she'd come flying in a club plane. During the fifty odd years I've been involved in professional aviation; most of that teaching in and flying high performance airplanes I've buried 32 of my friends and associates. My wife was with me through forty of those years and knew many of these people personally. I've dealt with this issue both in my own home and as an adviser to others. I can tell you this in all sincerity and honesty. I realize you might not be involved in high risk aviation so what I am about to say to you might even be easier for you in your personal situation as a pleasure pilot. I believe I have looked at this issue from enough directions and have enough experience with it that you might want to give serious consideration to my advice. When it comes to handling something like this with a loved one, you can of course attempt to convince your wife you will be safe based on the favorable statistics you can go dig up that say general aviation is a safe pastime. But my advice is to use this approach but with a caveat. Forget using the statistics alone without additional input from you as that road to convince a loved one is filled with pot holes. In order to reach your wife, don't down play the dangers involved with flying, as she is already convinced of a potential danger and has seen what can happen when things go wrong. The best way to handle these issues is to start immediately to convince her that rather than denying any danger exists, you are completely aware of the potential for danger in flying and are capable of avoiding that danger by the way you approach the issue of flying. In other words, what you want to accomplish here is to convince your wife that YOU PERSONALLY are an aware pilot with a professional attitude that is highly tuned in to the avoidance of areas of danger when you fly. What you want to do is steer your wife into thinking of you as a pilot separated from other pilots. You need to have her consider you INDIVIDUALLY as competent and professional instead of viewing you as just another pilot among many. It's the thinking about a large group where some get hurt or killed that frightens loved ones. Once she looks at you individually, she will realize that you PERSONALLY are aware of danger and competent enough to stay away from it. She will feel better knowing that. All this having been said, there is nothing cast in stone that will solve these kinds of issues. Accidents happen and pilots get killed once in a while. What it boils down to is that YOU are the only one who can address this issue with a loved one. It takes tact and it takes understanding, but most of all it means recognizing her fears as legitimate instead of down playing them with safety statistics. Bring her into your world as a pilot more than you have and let her know that above all else, you are aware....and you are a SAFE pilot. Hope this advice has been of some help. DH -- Dudley Henriques |
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I'll echo Dudley.. and add .. let her see that you are actively staying up
to speed to remain safe - get on the faa mailing list and attend local pilot safety meetings - attend AOPA safety meetings.. take their on line courses - take a weather course.. - add that next rating.. a commercial rating is the simplest to add.. a new rating means "additional training received". - don't wait for a sunny day and decide to go flying.. pick a day two to three weeks out.. and then if the weather is bad or something "just is not right"... make the decision not to go and let her know why you decided that it was not a good day to fly.. maybe it was just because you had a "bad day" at the office the day before.. and "your mind was not in the game".. remember and practice IMSAFE BT "Paul Tomblin" wrote in message ... I've been a pilot for 12 years now. I've been married (this time) for 10. Three years ago, the DE who passed me on my private and instrument tickets died in a stupid accident. My wife had met him a few times at flying club dinners and around the airport. A few weeks ago, a club member who she'd also met several times died in his float plane, a plane that I'd flown in a few weeks before that. He died with his best friend, a former club member who I knew a bit but whom my wife didn't. Now that two people she's met have died flying in a relatively short period of time, she's getting less and less secure about my own flying. Every time I head out to the airport, she gives me the talk. "Be careful. Don't die. If you have the slightest doubt, come back." Etc. And so on. I don't think she'll tell me to stop, because she knows I was a pilot before we married. But what can I do to reassure her? The pilot community is pretty small, and losing three people associated with our little club is pretty scary for her. At one time, I thought when the kids were finished college I'd finally have enough money to buy a share in a float plane and we could have some adventures together. Now I'm not even sure she'd come flying in a club plane. -- Paul Tomblin http://blog.xcski.com/ ...I'm not one of those who think Bill Gates is the devil. I simply suspect that if Microsoft ever met up with the devil, it wouldn't need an interpreter. -- Nick Petreley |
#4
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On Sep 30, 10:36 pm, Dudley Henriques wrote:
During the fifty odd years I've been involved in professional aviation; most of that teaching in and flying high performance airplanes I've buried 32 of my friends and associates. My wife was with me through forty of those years and knew many of these people personally. I've dealt with this issue both in my own home and as an adviser to others. I can tell you this in all sincerity and honesty. Hi, I'm a student pilot, and I am very curious to know what percentage of that 32 can be attributed to pilot error. Also, I agree. When I get my certificate, I plan to use same discipline that I use on my bike. I (very ocassionally) get up to 150 mph on my VFR-800, and this freaks people out, especially my sister, who worries and asks me if it is dangerous, and I tell the truth. But the danger is not on a straightaway. Danger happens during momentarily lapses of self- discipline at 30mph. On a recent 440 mile round-trip to family gathering, on the way home, it was 3:00 A.M, with about 8 miles to go, my legs were cramping up so bad that none of the "stick-leg-out-while" tricks would work. I started musing about all the bad things that could happen, because of simple leg cramps. "What if there is a mattress in road, not able to rake because legs won't move..what if I pass out..." Then, in an epiphanous moment, I thought, "Darwinism might be in action, at this very moment. Pull over." I calmly pulled my bike over to side of road, turned it off, parked it, and waited, in total darkness, for 15 minutes until my circulation got right again. My legs were so cramped, I could barely dismount without falling over. I have no idea whether I would have wrecked if I had tried to hold out those last 8 miles. But that's the point. I did not, because I made sure. I managed my risk. I told this story to my family and it helped them relax. Maybe you could tell a similar story to your wife. -Le Chaud Lapin- |
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Drive faster. my wife worries more about me getting killed on th eway to
the airport. Bertie |
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On Oct 1, 3:58 pm, (Paul Tomblin) wrote:
I've been a pilot for 12 years now. I've been married (this time) for 10. Stupid question, but does your wife fly with you? Do you actively involve her in your flying, or is she completely dis-interested. Sometimes, it's kinda like air-sickness, if your passenger is quezey, get them on the stick for a bit - perhaps if you could get your wife more involved, you could both enjoy it. AIDS (Aviation Induced Divorce Syndrome) is a fairly common affliction unfortunatly, you may need to take some preventative action sooner rather than later. |
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In a previous article, Dudley Henriques said:
In other words, what you want to accomplish here is to convince your wife that YOU PERSONALLY are an aware pilot with a professional attitude that is highly tuned in to the avoidance of areas of danger when you fly. The problem with that approach is that after the DE guy died, that worked because Rochester aviation's dirty little secret was that he was a known corner-cutter and risk taker. But when the other two died, I had to admit that I've flown with one of them a couple of times and I couldn't fault anything he did. He seemed to me careful and methodical and professional. -- Paul Tomblin http://blog.xcski.com/ If you're not part of the solution, you're part of the precipitate. |
#8
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In a previous article, James Sleeman said:
On Oct 1, 3:58 pm, (Paul Tomblin) wrote: I've been a pilot for 12 years now. I've been married (this time) for 10. Stupid question, but does your wife fly with you? Do you actively involve her in your flying, or is she completely dis-interested. She flies with me if we're going somewhere she wants to go. But 90% of the time if I'm just going for the sake of flying, she doesn't want to go. I used to drag her along, and she'd read a book or fall asleep. -- Paul Tomblin http://blog.xcski.com/ "I've gone through over-stressed to physical exhaustion -- what's next?" "Tuesday." -- Simon Burr and Kyle Hearn |
#9
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Paul Tomblin wrote:
In a previous article, Dudley Henriques said: In other words, what you want to accomplish here is to convince your wife that YOU PERSONALLY are an aware pilot with a professional attitude that is highly tuned in to the avoidance of areas of danger when you fly. The problem with that approach is that after the DE guy died, that worked because Rochester aviation's dirty little secret was that he was a known corner-cutter and risk taker. But when the other two died, I had to admit that I've flown with one of them a couple of times and I couldn't fault anything he did. He seemed to me careful and methodical and professional. Several of the 32 I have buried were Blue Angels and Thunderbirds. Others were air show display pilots, test pilots, and military pilots. These people represented the top of the heap and the best of the best. My wife knew them all, but these people were not me. How you convince your wife you are safe will be unique to your own personal situation and how good you are at presenting that situation to her. Best of luck to you. DH -- Dudley Henriques |
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She flies with me if we're going somewhere she wants to go. But 90% of
the time if I'm just going for the sake of flying, she doesn't want to go. I used to drag her along, and she'd read a book or fall asleep. Hey, that's the highest compliment a passenger can pay you. (They can't sleep if they're terrified... ;-) I have dealt with this fear from many angles. In fact, now it is ME who is scared, when my only son goes up for a lesson, so the shoe is truly on the other foot. With my wife, Mary, the best thing I could have done was to get her interested in flying. Once SHE had "the bug", there was no way she could sit on the ground and worry -- she was right there with me. This, of course, doesn't solve the very real problem of risk and risk avoidance that comes with flying -- but it makes our marriage more comfortable. Our families have always been worried about us flying, especially when we fly while our kids are in school. I must admit that Mary and I had long, involved discussions over the wisdom of this practice (required because our "weekends" are Wed/Thu, so if we want to fly it's going to be during their school day), and it's not always been easy to discuss. Our "worst case scenario" is imagining what would happen to our kids if we simply went up on a Wednesday and didn't come back. None of our family lives in Iowa, so the kids would be on their own throughout the ordeal that would inevitably follow an accident -- and this is simply not something any parent would wish on their kids. This fear has faded somewhat, now that our kids are teenagers. When they were in elementary school, Mary was VERY uncomfortable flying without them (for some reason it's okay WITH them, which is pretty odd, if you analyze it too much), because of the awful prospect of them waiting a day or two for relatives to arrive. On the plus side, this fear has made us VERY meticulous and careful pilots. Preflights are NEVER omitted, fuel tanks are ALWAYS filled, gas is ALWAYS tested, maintenance is ALWAYS done. Still, we all know that "**** happens", and we could become statistics at some point. I always fall back on two facts that comfort me: 1. You can either live, or wait to die. It's up to you. 2. Mary and I could be killed driving on the highway any day of the week. Life is a terminal condition. No one is getting off of this planet alive. It's up to each of us to make the best of our time here, and -- in my world -- that means flying. -- Jay Honeck Iowa City, IA Pathfinder N56993 www.AlexisParkInn.com "Your Aviation Destination" |
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