Just an anecdote about employment in the airline industry:
I was staying with my father, a successful pilot close to retirement, and his wife during my enrollment in DX school. Early on we were having a discussion about my forthcoming job search and to where I would likely apply. The discussion was led by my "short list," as it were- a group of airlines I'd selected based on company stability, type of operation, value of experience and location.
When the conversation moved to airlines which hadn't been included in my plans. To preface, my girlfriend and I had been living together for some months but had recently broken up. However, there had been some talk at the time of reuniting. With this in mind, I explained that some airlines had to be summarily dismissed from consideration based on their location. We had to consider where she would find gainful employment in her media career. This would naturally exclude cities such as Cheyenne, St. George and Memphis, among others.
Standing near his wife, he uttered this astonishing phrase: "Well, women are a lot easier to come by than aviation jobs."
After the initial shock passed and I had time to reflect upon our conversation, I began to think about how he could have said something like that. When I look back on my life, I thought of my mother and how she had been moved from city to city with complete focus on the career possibilities of my father.
Today, he is one of the highest paid pilots in the industry. Yet there is no doubt that his success was the result of some sacrifice. Some of it is luck, I suppose. You can land at the right companies on which to build a resume and have a reasonable expectation of job security once a job opens up and hope to continue until a better opportunity makes itself available.
Granted, persistence through passion has its place as well. When Frontier went bankrupt in 1986, he worked as an investment broker to support us but kept his passion and focus intact, knowing that his own misfortune was bound to redeem itself eventually in another opportunity somewhere. He's not the kind to show his emotions, but I can only imagine how hard it was for him, to have his dreams grounded while looking willy to the sky.
With this, I was able to understand his curious comment further and saw that it was not some cold, paralyzingly cynical view on life, liberty and the pursuit of aviation. Rather, it was a sobering statement on the sum of his life experience in his struggles within an industry that has about as much stability as a vat of liquid nitrogen on a roller-coaster.
The trick is you have to ride it out. Don't lose hope.