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Regardless of how you feel about flying now, would you get into aviation again if you knew what was in store? Especially if you started in the early 90's or 2001 or any other stellar stretch of aviation hiring. Yes, No, or Hell No
I've flown for many different companies. I was referring to quitting the career. Hey, if you have the time to be hired by a regional, you have the time to be hired by the companies I worked for.That's a hell of a regional you fly for; who was that again?
Absolutely yes. It's an easy job, pretty good money, no stress. Life is good.
What other job would pay me $100K to fly jets 14 days a month and non-rev to Europe on my off days?
I actually see them more. Instead of coming home tired at 6PM 5 days a week just in time to see the family for a couple hours before bedtime, I get half or more of the month off to spend with them. Works for me. If you're happier with the traditional everyday work schedule, fine for you too. Personally, I'm way to lazy to work a real job.This is how I decided to quit. Think about it, count up the amount of days that you will see your wife, family, kids, friends, dog, cat, gay lover, or whatever, and cut that in two. That is what it means to be a pilot. Now do you think that you are paid enough to make that sacrifice. Because that is what it is. Are you willing to see your loved ones half an much in order to push the autopilot button. I know that when it all ends and I am on my death bed I won't wish that I had spent more time away from the people that matter most.
8Oh and how many trips did you make to Europe last year.
No thanks. Why should I waste my own money on an airplane when I can get paid good money to fly someone else's airplane. I can always rent the Decathlon when I want to do loops. As I said, life is good.Buy an experimental for $20,000 and go do loops until you puke.
I would say probably not although I waiver on that from time to time.
At first, getting a real job at a regional was a dream come true. Then, like most things, the novelty wore off and I started resenting the pay, schedule, commute and what it was doing to my family and social life.
So I worked like hell to move on to a major where I thought everything would be different. Better pay, schedules, and I was moving to my domicile in a city I'd always wanted to live in so no more commute. For a while everything was perfect but just like before, the novelty of flying the "big" jets to the "cool" places was gone and it became nothing more than a paycheck.
For me, I actually envy my friends who have the 9-5 and can make plans to do things more than a month out at a time. I miss the social life that comes with the office type job. Most of the time I feel like I'm working with complete strangers and 4 days isn't really long enough to develop any real friendship. Once in a while I'll see a familiar face in the crew room but the people I do know well commute and so we never get the chance to do anything together. I guess I just feel like I had more friends when I wasn't a pilot for a living.