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David B. Cole wrote:
[...] I myself am guilty of that in that if money were not an issue I would probably go back for an engineering doctorate and teach. Heh. Engineering? No wonder I like you. [...] I still relish going down to the Flying W airport, where I learned to fly, on a beautiful spring or fall day and sitting on the grass watching other people fly. This is an area where I stint. I reason that, as little time I have around airplanes, I should fly with as much of that time as possible. Perhaps that's an error. [...] To me it's the perfect combination of science and fun. Absolutely. Instrument flying also appeals to the same persnickety nature that works for me in software engineering. [...] So given that and that I'm almost 32, it's unlikely that I will ever fly professionally. Part of it comes back to giving up so much in order to do so, and I certainly admire those that have done it. But maybe I'll go for the CFI/II and instruct part-time. I've always had a gift for teaching and maybe this is the perfect combination of what I enjoy and what I'm good at. You could always teach engineering at a school which specializes in (or has a good program for) aviation. Add a CFII to that, and... I didn't mean to go into a long rant. I just wanted to see whether others out there find themselves ensnared by this hobby to the extent they wonder about their sanity. I had a dinner with a friend yesterday and I told her that I was considering tallying up all the money I had spend on flying to date. She told me not to, and asked if it really mattered how much I 'd spent? It was something I did for myself and it was something that made me very happy so how could I place a price on that? She told me that so few people ever find anything that they're passionate about, and even fewer have an opportunity to make it a reality. I don't think I'm alone given what I know about others on this board, but sometimes we need a sanity check. I've never computed that total, but I can get pretty close just in my head. It's no trivial number. When I think what that money could have done for my business, or my family, I do feel a little ill. Who am I to waste so much on a "mere hobby"? But life isn't something to be survived. We won't do that anyway, so it's a poor goal in the long term. Instead, we should be doing the things that make our hearts beat quicker, that take our breath away, and that warm our souls. I've several passions in my life. Flying is one. I could live without it, but it would mean less living. Is this normal? I'd say "no". Most people give up on their passions as a part of the process they mistake for maturing. We're taught to "get by", "do the job we're given", or "fit in". But passion isn't about any of these things. One cannot discover passion by "getting by". Passion is discovered by investing one's self completely in the "job we're given", and then discovering where that takes us or what that does to us. If we bring passion to everything we do, we're free to find that about which we're passionate. But "getting by" leaves no room for the discovery of passion. What might have excited us is never given the chance, even if we do stumble across it. Passion is also contagious. If nothing else, I owe it to my son to fan the flames of my passions, that he can catch his own (which had damned well better include aviation {8^). - Andrew |
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