Do you work in the industry?
You 100% don’t fly regardless, in the professional world of aviation we have flight risk tools, and even before that if you recently had a major life event there is a reason most reputable companies have bereavement leave.
A popped checkride, no one is going to care, especially a regional, as long as you don’t keep blowing the same ride, I don’t think it’s going to be a factor.
A boat will kill you just as dead, and in many ways if you’re going off shore it has its own risks unique to itself.
Yes. Though I retired from the “industry” several years ago.
Even then, I was seeing an ever-increasing number of Emo pilots. Not all, but too many. You know, young men and women who thought that nearly everything that happened in their lives was unique and/or, in so many instances, “terrible” or “horrifying”.
Oddly (or not), these were frequently the very same pilots who thought everyone, including me, should be interested in what they had for lunch.
I was not interested. I’m still not interested.
Why, once, one of them was even expected to dispatch with an inoperative autopilot! “Can they
do that to us?” The horror! Oh the humanity!
Piloting airplanes used to be considered a Profession. It was what you
were, not what you
did. A professional pilot could perform, even in (especially in) adverse conditions regardless of circumstance. Like our society, things are changing.
A professional pilot rises to the occasion. A professional pilot is expected to do just that. No more, no less.
You can stop and float in your boat if things start moving too fast for you. You can even jump out of the boat if things get too tough.
I stand by my previous post.