- Joined
- Mar 15, 2016
- Messages
- 4,898
- Display Name
Display name:
Ari
Part of my definition of 'professional' is the ability to moderate language and conduct according to the situation. I know a judge who has a cattle ranch. I haven't ridden with him but I doubt he speaks the same to his herd as he does to attorneys in court.I guess you don't know a lot of professionals.
How does teaching your kids how to fly compare with teaching them how to drive? I would think it's less stressful since you have dual controls in the plane but not in the car, but I haven't been through the process (yet). I just know how much safer I feel in the copilot seat as opposed to the passenger seat of a car, regardless of who's flying or driving at the time.I just started teaching my 18 year old to fly.
To the OP: A good teacher, of any material, will find a way to relate to the student. "Don't side load the gear" is sufficient instruction for a 500-hour pilot with lots of tailwheel time, but not for you as you don't seem to have enough experience to immediately recognize the symptoms or cures for side-loading. And that's fine, it just means you need to get time with a different instructor or succeed in communicating to your current instructor, on the ground when you don't have an airplane to fly, why you're struggling to understand some of his instruction. If you want a break from the instrument slog, I always suggest a tailwheel endorsement as the biggest bang for your buck to be a better overall pilot.
The instrument rating is a hard one because it involves skills that your body actively tries to undermine, procedures that seem to be written in hieroglyphics, and talking to ATC at machine-gun pace, all while trying to fly an airplane when it may not quite be second nature. Somewhere along the way to an instrument rating, you will truly understand what task saturation is, and how to deal with that when you're bouncing around alone in the clouds is another important thing you should learn along the way. The more of the tasks that you can accomplish with ease and aplomb on their own (such as flying the plane to instrument standards regarding altitude, course, and heading, talking to ATC, briefing approach plates in your living room while someone else is watching TV, etc.) the less saturated you'll be when you combine them under the hood in the plane.
So go fly for fun. Fly solo, with friends and family, and with other pilots. Get flight following every time you go anywhere. Debrief how you did with your pilot friends (whether you and they have flown together or just visited around the airport beer cooler) and discuss where each of you has room to learn or improve. Read and participate in discussions online. All of these things will help you focus your energy on making improvements to your flying and achieving the ratings you're after.