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Piloting career regrets?

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757 ...

I beg the differ ... I have been in this field for over 6 years ... 3+ lay offs .. never made more than 28K/yr ... still pushing rusty old Navajos ... I have flown in the Arctics, in the south and yelled at by crazy bosses in the middle of Bumble **CENSORED****CENSORED****CENSORED****CENSORED** Nowhere ...

When I started , I never had the funky Uniform, 6 figure salary and secure 9-5 job in mind ... I never cared where I lived or how hard I had to work. 3000 hours later and I am still enjoying it very much. I left a 90K engineering job to fly in the 90s and still no regrets ... If you want to fly ... there are jobs out there ...

If I loose interest, I just go do something else that I enjoy ...
would you fly a Navajo on extended time away from home for $28K/yr? If so ... PM me ...

Capt'n MayDay
 
Tinman, you will know some of the details of this jump. If you haven't guessed already, I'm THAT guy...or at least, I was.
Well Avbug, there are two local skydiving stories from the last 25 some odd years. I didn't put 2 and 2 together until I asked the owner, but I'm guessing that you are one of the them(the other person died so it wasn't you, unless all your posts have come from the other side!:D). All I can say is, d@mn that was a bad day.
 
They say that sometimes you're the windshield, and sometimes the bug. In terms of the tylenol factor, it wasn't a particularly good day. However, right at that moment in my life I was a little conflicted on purpose. I think that the event was sort of a kick in the pants that served to remind me, like some higher power saying, "Hey, you're not dead, yet!"

I looked back on that event as a motivator that suggested there was a reason I wasn't dead. I'm not sure what that reason was or is, but I am certain that once I fulfill whatever it is...I'll be dead.

So in the grand scheme of things, it wasn't such a bad day after all. The only easy day, was yesterday.
 

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