Timebuilder
Entrepreneur
- Joined
- Nov 25, 2001
- Posts
- 4,625
I have found a little ginger ale helps to settle my stomach.
A few weeks ago, I had to sit on the "potty seat" during training in the Lear. It was bumpy, and we were doing steep turns, and I couldn't see outside very well from my position while the other trainee was flying the airplane. I turned at least five shades of green, but fortunately had digested all of my breakfast already.
For you, I would do a couple of things. One, try to keep a cool airflow going in the cockpit. Open the window if you have to. Two, have your instructor take the aircraft controls and scan while you focus your eyes on the horizon.
The motion sickness comes from a lack of, or a disparity of visual inputs and kinesthetic inputs to the brain. That means what you are seeing, or failing to see, doesn't agree with what you are feeling.
A few weeks ago, I had to sit on the "potty seat" during training in the Lear. It was bumpy, and we were doing steep turns, and I couldn't see outside very well from my position while the other trainee was flying the airplane. I turned at least five shades of green, but fortunately had digested all of my breakfast already.
For you, I would do a couple of things. One, try to keep a cool airflow going in the cockpit. Open the window if you have to. Two, have your instructor take the aircraft controls and scan while you focus your eyes on the horizon.
The motion sickness comes from a lack of, or a disparity of visual inputs and kinesthetic inputs to the brain. That means what you are seeing, or failing to see, doesn't agree with what you are feeling.