Gio Paolinelli
Filing Flight Plan
- Joined
- Jun 5, 2017
- Messages
- 11
- Display Name
Display name:
PaolinelliPilot
Hi everyone and thank you for reading this post.
I want to share a bit of backstory first to lay the context and give y'all a bit more of insight.
When I met my husband, he swore he was not going to fly anywhere. He would walk, drive, hitchhike, ride a donkey, swim or take a boat to his destination. He developed a fear of flying since he was 16 and was forced to fly due to work with terrible consequences to his emotional health.
Fast forward some years and we live far from our hometowns, and I have to travel back for a couple of weeks. He agrees to come with me with the condition that he gets medication from his doctor to ease the anxiety. A pilot friend suggests to him that he tries X-plane to see if that helps. It actually did and he got so hooked on it. We make it to our flight, he does pretty well on the way there and excellent on the way back. When we get home, he confesses that before his phobia, he wanted to be a pilot but discarded the idea later. Now he was ready to go for a discovery flight.
He goes through the training with flying colors because at home he cannot stop practicing with his home-brewed simulator (we can talk about that later) and he is ready to get his solo flight. His CFI also kicked butt. But around the same time, we get bad news from the doctor: due to medical reasons he is not able to pass the medical test. He has been crushed about it but has managed to find ways to fly as much as he can with his CFI, but the possibility of him getting his license is very remote or will take a long time.
Here is where I come in the picture. I get the training and I get the license so he doesn't have to depend on hiring another pilot.
I've joined him on some of the flights (the cross-country ones that involve a lunch spot) and I enjoy the experience but I never really had the desire to learn to fly. I was terrified in my discovery flight but it was not a paralyzing fear. The CFI said he saw a lot of potential which made me feel good. I also see his passion and want to help him as much as possible to achieve his dream.
Do you have any advice for me? I feel I can overcome my fears and enjoy the experience of learning how to fly, but any encouragement from experts like you will be appreciated.
I want to share a bit of backstory first to lay the context and give y'all a bit more of insight.
When I met my husband, he swore he was not going to fly anywhere. He would walk, drive, hitchhike, ride a donkey, swim or take a boat to his destination. He developed a fear of flying since he was 16 and was forced to fly due to work with terrible consequences to his emotional health.
Fast forward some years and we live far from our hometowns, and I have to travel back for a couple of weeks. He agrees to come with me with the condition that he gets medication from his doctor to ease the anxiety. A pilot friend suggests to him that he tries X-plane to see if that helps. It actually did and he got so hooked on it. We make it to our flight, he does pretty well on the way there and excellent on the way back. When we get home, he confesses that before his phobia, he wanted to be a pilot but discarded the idea later. Now he was ready to go for a discovery flight.
He goes through the training with flying colors because at home he cannot stop practicing with his home-brewed simulator (we can talk about that later) and he is ready to get his solo flight. His CFI also kicked butt. But around the same time, we get bad news from the doctor: due to medical reasons he is not able to pass the medical test. He has been crushed about it but has managed to find ways to fly as much as he can with his CFI, but the possibility of him getting his license is very remote or will take a long time.
Here is where I come in the picture. I get the training and I get the license so he doesn't have to depend on hiring another pilot.
I've joined him on some of the flights (the cross-country ones that involve a lunch spot) and I enjoy the experience but I never really had the desire to learn to fly. I was terrified in my discovery flight but it was not a paralyzing fear. The CFI said he saw a lot of potential which made me feel good. I also see his passion and want to help him as much as possible to achieve his dream.
Do you have any advice for me? I feel I can overcome my fears and enjoy the experience of learning how to fly, but any encouragement from experts like you will be appreciated.