Getting what??
Exactly.
I'll try again, anyways. Maybe more calmly this time:
Keep your standards high, kid. There is nothing better than somebody that has a passion for this job and loves to do it. You sound like you may have that passion. But there is nothing equally worse than letting that passion allow you to degrade the job by doing it for less than it's worth.
I will put this in better perspective for you with an example, because maybe we need to stop calling you an idiot and explain to you why you are wrong, first:
I like graphic design. I have done magazine covers for some of our University groups, and have done some corporate stuff. I also do it in my spare time because I plain enjoy making art. Let's say I wanted to make a career out of this, ok?
So, what we have are a few basic assumptions:
1. I enjoy graphic designing
2. I can make a career out of graphic design and potentially make it a business
...therefore, I start selling my designs.
The correct course of action for me to make this a livelihood is to take my graphic design skills (which I independently enjoy) and get the most money I can possibly get for them (because the alternative does not make rational sense--key word: rational). I have two options:
1. Ask companies to please use my graphics for their business, telling them I'll do it for less and less because I really like doing this and would love to see my artwork in their catalogs (gives me a hard on).
2. Sell my services to businesses (who need my services) and demand top dollar for my work because it is worth it and among the best they'll find.
The repercussions of choosing route 1: Management eventually paying less and less to me and others who were once lucrative at this venture, thereby bringing down the standard that was once held by the graphic design business.
This is not so different from your situation. You enjoy aviation, you love flying airplanes, and you have an option to make a career out of it, but you are choosing route 1. You cannot really believe that you are among the best pilots that Airline X can have if you believe that being paid substantially less than your older counterparts is acceptable because "19K is livable for my age group" or "60K after 10 years rox." Chances are, you don't live independently enough to come to that conclusion. And if you don't think this applies to you because you "know" you aren't among the best pilots Airline X will hire, this is not the profession for you. Find something that'll keep you on the ground and leave the responsibility to someone who truly try and believe they are among the best and responsible.