A Life Aloft
Well-Known Member
No matter what you are flying, never, ever take your view for granted. There may unexpectedly come a day when you no longer have one.
No matter what you are flying, never, ever take your view for granted. There may unexpectedly come a day when you no longer have one.
No matter what you are flying, never, ever take your view for granted. There may unexpectedly come a day when you no longer have one.
This is very true. Ask me how I know. All you can think of is 'if I had known that my last flight was truly my last flight'........... But I was very lucky in that I got to have one more day and evening several months later in the only place that has ever brought me true peace......the sky. The only place where I had known my entire life that I truly belonged. I got one more sunset, one more starry evening, one more coastline, one more mountain range, one more moment of joy skimming the ocean, one more sun filled day, one more chance to chase through the clouds and one more day of real freedom. I took my one do-over. I figured that I deserved it and I needed some partial closure/relief. Many others aren't so fortunate.You are one doc appt away from losing everything you know and love for; it's amazing what one test can reveal.
Only guarantees in life are death and taxes. Harsh but cannot be proven wrong.
Enjoy every day like it's your last in the air.
This very true. Ask me how I know. All you can think of is 'if I had known that my last flight was truly my last flight'........... But I was very lucky in that I got to have one do over, one more day and evening several months later in the only place that has ever brought me true peace......the sky. The only place where I had known my entire life that I truly belonged. I got one more sunset, one more starry evening, one more coastline, one more mountain range, one more moment of joy skimming the ocean, one more sun filled day, one more chance to chase through the clouds and one more day of real freedom. Many others aren't so fortunate.
Be passionate. Because when you are truly passionate about what you do, you will find peace, you will know happiness and you seriously will never feel you have wasted your time or that your job is a chore or that life is mundane. Be.......really be in each and every moment you are aloft and savor them like a marvelous beautiful woman.
Cannot agree more. I got a cancer diagnosis on the day I got my last medical in March. Not a fun situation. Beat the cancer and playing the paperwork game now, but what you posted is spot on. You never know what tomorrow will give you and if you don't live each day as it's last, you won't know what you lived. Some may say "whatever, not happening to me", but if/when it does, everything you longed for and enjoyed comes before your eyes. For me the worst case was losing my wife, but for #2, it was the fear of never flying again, never running a checklist, or landing after a day most would want a beer to cure. Sounds stupid, and I hope no one has to experience it, but it exists and far too many pilots will have to deal with it. Be humbled with what you get to do, with the understanding of one mistake or fateful doctor visit, it can all vanish.
Man, that is some tough chit. I hope you have this beat for good and are back in the saddle sooner rather than later. People that think it can't happen to them are just kidding themselves.Cannot agree more. I got a cancer diagnosis on the day I got my last medical in March. Not a fun situation. Beat the cancer and playing the paperwork game now, but what you posted is spot on. You never know what tomorrow will give you and if you don't live each day as it's last, you won't know what you lived. Some may say "whatever, not happening to me", but if/when it does, everything you longed for and enjoyed comes before your eyes. For me the worst case was losing my wife, but for #2, it was the fear of never flying again, never running a checklist, or landing after a day most would want a beer to cure. Sounds stupid, and I hope no one has to experience it, but it exists and far too many pilots will have to deal with it. Be humbled with what you get to do, with the understanding of one mistake or fateful doctor visit, it can all vanish.
Wow. That is remarkable. Amazing what can develop out of the pile of crap that life sometimes hands us. Life happily, does evolve. After the floundering and unsteadiness, a bit of shock and depression, you finally decide to keep moving forward even if it's on a different path than the one you knew and you aren't quite sure where you are headed.Thanks man, I wish you the best. The first few months is the hardest. You'll figure out who you are, and it's interesting to see how life changes. In all that time, I got married, bought a house, and we are preparing for our first child. I was incredibly blessed with great friends and family to help me sort through it all.
Cheers to kicking cancer in the ass!Cannot agree more. I got a cancer diagnosis on the day I got my last medical in March. Not a fun situation. Beat the cancer and playing the paperwork game now, but what you posted is spot on. You never know what tomorrow will give you and if you don't live each day as it's last, you won't know what you lived. Some may say "whatever, not happening to me", but if/when it does, everything you longed for and enjoyed comes before your eyes. For me the worst case was losing my wife, but for #2, it was the fear of never flying again, never running a checklist, or landing after a day most would want a beer to cure. Sounds stupid, and I hope no one has to experience it, but it exists and far too many pilots will have to deal with it. Be humbled with what you get to do, with the understanding of one mistake or fateful doctor visit, it can all vanish.
No matter what you are flying, never, ever take your view for granted. There may unexpectedly come a day when you no longer have one.