But I have to also explain the losses of Scott Crossfield and Steve Fossett, and near fatal crash of Sparky Imeson.
Crossfield? Yep... But he got bad info from ATC WRT storms. Imeson? Yep... And he'll tell you the mistakes he made, and that we're all human. Fossett? Well, you have a higher opinion of him than I do, I guess. IMHO, he was more of a master of the art of endurance than the art of flying.
One thing that I always go back to is an example from teaching truck drivers. I never had a trainee that said "I don't really care if I have an accident." Pretty much every one said "I want to be safe and accident-free so I have a good record and get my safety bonus." And like the rest of the industry, 2/3ds of them had a minor accident within 90 days - Generally, backing into something or cutting a corner too tight.
After I realized this, I started talking about the psychology of safety with them. I told them that every single trainee I'd ever had said they were going to do their best and be safe, and that still, 2/3ds of them had an accident in the first 90 days. I told them that you can't think about safety 99.99% of the time, because you WILL have an accident in that last 0.01%. I told them that accidents don't happen at high noon on a sunny day with a dry road and a full night's sleep, they happen when the weather sucks, you've been trudging around New Jersey getting yelled at in Spanish or Engtalian by imbeciles on loading docks on a four-pickup load, it's been snowing all day, and you got three hours of sleep. You finally make it over to Columbia or Lamar or Brookville, you're finally in range to finish the trip the next day, you get into a truck stop and you're backing into a parking spot wanting nothing but to get in the bunk as soon as possible - And that keeps you from getting out and looking, and you knock out someone's headlight on your blind side. BTDT. I tell them, DO NOT let yourself think that you don't have to get out and look, because when you're tired and just want to get in the bunk, THAT is when it happens, and in the process of taking care of all the post-accident junk you will take MUCH longer to get into that bunk if you don't get out and look.
What happened to my trainees' accident rate after I started giving that whole spiel to them?
Not a damn thing. I came to the conclusion that ego, combined with not wanting to get in an accident, led people to think that they couldn't get into an accident.
Until you have the attitude that "It CAN happen to me," you do not have a safe frame of mind.
I think that as pilots, we have it even a little bit worse - The general public sees pilots as steely-eyed missile men in a way, with a certain amount of bravado. When we become pilots, I think we tend to step into that role, and in doing so, when we get together with a group of pilots we tend to try to one-up each other just that much more, which feeds the ego monster and pushes us ever further from the "It CAN happen to me" attitude that can keep us out of the trees. And the crazy thing is, even though I "know" this, it applies to me just as much as anyone else.
I'd like to think that we on this board are safer pilots than the general pilot population, and I think we probably are to some extent. But, I learned a couple of years ago that WE, yes those of us right here on the friendly blue board, we aren't as safe as we think we are, both individually and collectively. I even posted about it at that point, I believe the thread was called "Safety and the group dynamic." I saw people in a previous thread swearing left and right that they'd never do this, they'd never do that, when in fact I had personally watched those same people do exactly the things they swore they wouldn't. After that thread, I had several others tell me about very near-disastrous things they had done. That's when I realized that as safe as we are because of this board, we are also unsafe for some of the same reasons, and most of it has to do with our incorrect answer to the question "Can it happen to me?"
It CAN happen to you, folks, and until you admit that to yourself (something I'm still having as much trouble with as anyone!), you and I are both accidents waiting to happen. We'll tiptoe past those links in the chain - I can go flying today, because that little tiny issue I found on preflight isn't that bad. It might kill someone else, but they're not as good of a pilot as I am. I can go flying today, because last time the weather was like this, it ended up being OK, so it won't get worse today. I can go flying today, because I know that if my engine fails I'll do a perfect dead-stick landing into an open field, and I know I'm dressed warm enough to stand around in that open field in this weather. I can go flying today, because if anything happens I'm sure I can handle it - Sure I didn't quite get enough sleep last night, but I feel OK. And sooner or later, we're gonna be at the other end of the chain, looking back and feeling a bit silly that we let the chain build to that point.
And that's how good pilots get in accidents. Be safe out there, folks.