Way2Broke
Member
- Joined
- Feb 24, 2005
- Posts
- 2,882
So since I got put on the street, like so many other pilots are or have been in the past I got to pondering why I became a pilot in the first place, and if I should have done it in the first place. I began flying in April 2001 with the intention of flying a RJ and progressing onto a major. At the time I was 19 years old and clueless. I saw aviation as a mysterious creature that no matter how much you read about it you couldn't understand what it was like until you actually did it. I made many mistakes in my quest to get paid to fly for a living, and I am a better person for having made them. So on to what I think I have learned.
If you get into aviation to make money and enjoy what you have "read about it" you are in it for all the wrong reasons. How do I know, I got into aviation for money. Of course it didn't take long to realize that if your in flying for the money your in it for the wrong reason. After years of struggling with student loan payments, and low paying jobs I can attest to that. If you think that two years, or hell even ten years, after going to flight school you will enjoy traveling the world, drive fancy cars, and have a trophy wife at the house that takes care of your kids you are in it for the wrong reason. If you think that people will be impressed that you fly a jet, you are in it for the wrong reason. So why should you get into aviation. One word, adventure.
With aviation you never know what is right around the corner, both at work and in life. You never know when the next emergency will present itself, or when you might have to drastically change how you live to accommodate the current job market. You will meet all kinds of people, develop a attitude that most people will not understand, and more than likely learn how to be very humble, even though you might not express that attitude. It might take a while, but sooner than later you will realize that if you stick with aviation you are in for one hell of a ride. Every minute, good and bad, develops who you are as a person. You will start to watch people that work a 9-5 and think that they live in a close minded world that is fed to them with a spoon, or you will start to think that they have it all figured out. In which case you might want to do a day in their shoes. You will go through good times, and bad, but all along your doing things that most people only dream of.
So my point, most people get into aviation because they read a glossy ad in a flying magazine that promises the world, but people stay in aviation because they enjoy a adventure. If you want a adventure, aviation never disappoints. Take the good with the bad, be proactive, and remember, most people dream of doing what we do.
Oh, by the way, I never flew a RJ and I don't think I want to fly for a Major, but who knows, it's all part of the ride. Let the adventure continue.
If you get into aviation to make money and enjoy what you have "read about it" you are in it for all the wrong reasons. How do I know, I got into aviation for money. Of course it didn't take long to realize that if your in flying for the money your in it for the wrong reason. After years of struggling with student loan payments, and low paying jobs I can attest to that. If you think that two years, or hell even ten years, after going to flight school you will enjoy traveling the world, drive fancy cars, and have a trophy wife at the house that takes care of your kids you are in it for the wrong reason. If you think that people will be impressed that you fly a jet, you are in it for the wrong reason. So why should you get into aviation. One word, adventure.
With aviation you never know what is right around the corner, both at work and in life. You never know when the next emergency will present itself, or when you might have to drastically change how you live to accommodate the current job market. You will meet all kinds of people, develop a attitude that most people will not understand, and more than likely learn how to be very humble, even though you might not express that attitude. It might take a while, but sooner than later you will realize that if you stick with aviation you are in for one hell of a ride. Every minute, good and bad, develops who you are as a person. You will start to watch people that work a 9-5 and think that they live in a close minded world that is fed to them with a spoon, or you will start to think that they have it all figured out. In which case you might want to do a day in their shoes. You will go through good times, and bad, but all along your doing things that most people only dream of.
So my point, most people get into aviation because they read a glossy ad in a flying magazine that promises the world, but people stay in aviation because they enjoy a adventure. If you want a adventure, aviation never disappoints. Take the good with the bad, be proactive, and remember, most people dream of doing what we do.
Oh, by the way, I never flew a RJ and I don't think I want to fly for a Major, but who knows, it's all part of the ride. Let the adventure continue.