Meltdown in the plane? No. Mental freak-out, thinking I could possibly die, heart beating so fast that it felt like my jugular could explode but cant let my passenger know or else she would never fly with me again/she would actually have a meltdown? yes.
I was a pretty new PPL with about 75-80hrs under my belt, and I traveled to KAVL one night. Forecast was a bit windy with a reported FEW080. Highest I needed to climb to clear the mountains was 7,500ft heading east. Fueled up and preflight, called ATIS and its still reporting FEW080, high winds but almost aligned with the runway so I figured a non-event departure.
We takeoff, turn crosswind, downwind then depart the downwind.. At about 3,500-4,000ft AGL BAM city lights disappear, I can see my prop in slow motion, the strobes just lighting everything up around me and I coulndnt see a thing outside.. I WAS IN A CLOUD LEAVING ASHEVILLE VFR!!!
I instantly stopped looking out the window and maintained Vy and the wings stabilized.. I couldnt believe what was happening.. It wasnt reported.. the lowest clouds were reported at 8000ft. I didnt know what to do.. Most would say do a 180 but I was leaving a mountainous terrain. Instantly but "calmly" asked my passanger (somewhat familiar with basic functions of G1000) to pull up the terrain.. I was in good shape as far as terrain clearance which did make me feel a bit better but that meant chit since I was still IMC at night. I didnt think "oh its just a cloud" I thought "something unforcasted happened, wide-spread IMC.. rain, ice??".. just bad scenarios running through my head.
The whole ordeal lasted less than 1 minute.. maybe 45 seconds but my god it felt like 1 hour. I was too scared to fly at night for a while, fearing a repeat scenario.. On the car ride home that night, I questioned my love for flying.. then the following days it just made me want my IR even more. I didnt fly at night for a few months and then the "fear" sorta faded.. I havent had anything like that happen again and about half of my flying is done at night.