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#1
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Brad wrote:
Anyway, being a PPL/IR, when I heard about his accident I couldn't (still can't) help but ask, "What if?" What if I had been there? What if I could have offered some bit of advice that he hadn't considered? What if....? If my only choices were to pull up and stall into a bunch of trees vs. a freeway full of cars, I'd choose the trees, but I can't help but think, if I were only there. Any advice on how to get past this train of thought? Flying involves risk. Accept the fact that you are going to lose friends as your flying career progresses. I was in the same situation as you, some 20 years ago, asking, "Why?" Another pilot friend told me what I am going to pass on to you, "When your number is up, your number is up. Nothing you can do will change it." Being involved in sport acrobatics, I lose two or three acquaintances each year do to "accidents". I cannot change what has happened, I just accept it and remember to learn from their mishap. You can practice emergency procedures, read everything you can get your hands on, fly with more experienced pilots, seek out the older instructors. In short, never stop learning, never get complacent (sic), don't get so full of yourself that you think you know it all. If you do, it will bite you in the ass at the first opportunity. Always err on the safe, conservative side. If you don't have enough local knowledge and weather information, don't fly. If something just doesn't seem quite right, taxi back and park the airplane. Break the chain of events and live to fly another day. |
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For your peace of mind, assume he *did* pick the best option. Another
day, another plane, and the trees the energy lost to the disintegration of the aircraft might have saved them. Don |
#3
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On Tue, 21 Oct 2003 01:49:57 GMT, john smith wrote in
Message-Id: : In short, never stop learning, never get complacent (sic), don't get so full of yourself that you think you know it all. If you do, it will bite you in the ass at the first opportunity. Always err on the safe, conservative side. The true Axis Of Evil in America is our genious at marketing coupled with the stupidity of our people. -- Bill Maher |
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