Soku39
Well-Known Member
I suppose so; you’re going to do very little else for that time (ask me how I know).
That's why I would prefer to have to opportunity to not worry about aviation for two years and focus on just the one thing. This is just my experience after having to split attention between the airline and Air Force for the better part of a decade.
My brother sells telecom. He owns a 1.4 million dollar house where I grew up in the SF Bay.
No radiation exposure. No travel. No drug testing. Works from home. Spends tons of time with his kid. Goes to the range a lot and punches holes in paper.
Better healthcare. Better vacation policy. More control over his personal life. Better career outlook. Healthier lifestyle.
Do you want me to post his LinkedIn or something? How specific do you want me to be? How many friends with jobs that aren’t in aviation do you want me to name?
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No need for the snark, this is a great example, but it doesn't answer how long it took him to get into it, who he had to know, his other pedigree. I would consider your brother lucky, when I'm flying over cities, most houses are not 1.4 million dollars, which means most people aren't doin what he's doin.
My brother also lives in SF, works for a large tech company doing UI/UX after getting an MFA while being a high school teacher. He has a good set up, but I don't necessarily envy him.
I too know many people in many other careers, but few of their lives are what I consider better than mine. That's what I was detailing in my original post, that said 80% of this is due to sheer luck, I could have had a completely opposite experience had 2 or 3 factors been different.