L
Lesson learned
Guest
Hi everyone, I just recently found this site, and I am feeling fortunate to be able to present this question here. I have only one very specific question, but I'm going to give you just a tiny bit of background before I get to it.
I have exhaustedly researched all the alcohol threads on this site, and I could be wrong, but I think I may have a question that hasn't been asked yet!
A few years ago, my SO (now ex) and I used to drink together at home. A LOT. Was usually happy, but one night, went too far, fight, fake break-up, bla bla. I became irrationally depressed, family got involved, decided I was a danger to myself, had me taken to hospital. I still cringe just typing it. Worst thing I have ever done.
Total abstinence since that day 4ish years ago. Yes, total. No champagne on New Year's Eve, no just one beer after mowing the lawn...
I don't have the medical records, but I'm sure that my BAC was embarrassingly high. Probably well into the 0.2xx range. When the nurse came to talk to me after she took my blood test, she said something to the effect of "I honestly can't believe you are standing up straight and having a rational conversation with me" Yikes.
My current medical is about to expire, and as this event is well beyond two years in the past, I am going to go basicmed. I am so grateful for this program, as it gives people like me who screwed up royally once, but just once, a chance to keep flying responsibly.
So here is the question:
If at some point in the future I decided I wanted to go back to class three, or even two, or one, I understand that there are other issues surrounding the hospitalization that I will have to answer for, but this is the one I'm curious about at the moment: What stance does the FAA take on a blood alcohol concentration that shows obvious tolerance, when it does NOT relate to an arrest or a driving offense? Do you get bonus points for "wow, he used to drink a lot, but at least he never did it and then got behind the wheel?" Or do they have one of their handy statistics that says something like "Well, research shows that if you can tolerate 0. 2, that means you have driven at at least 0.15, 40 to 45% of the time...."
this is all based on the assumption that if I ever decide to get a class 3 reinstated, I will most likely need those medical records.
So there is my question, how does the FAA feel about a past high alcohol tolerance for someone who DIDN'T get behind the wheel? and I thank you all for your input.
I have exhaustedly researched all the alcohol threads on this site, and I could be wrong, but I think I may have a question that hasn't been asked yet!
A few years ago, my SO (now ex) and I used to drink together at home. A LOT. Was usually happy, but one night, went too far, fight, fake break-up, bla bla. I became irrationally depressed, family got involved, decided I was a danger to myself, had me taken to hospital. I still cringe just typing it. Worst thing I have ever done.
Total abstinence since that day 4ish years ago. Yes, total. No champagne on New Year's Eve, no just one beer after mowing the lawn...
I don't have the medical records, but I'm sure that my BAC was embarrassingly high. Probably well into the 0.2xx range. When the nurse came to talk to me after she took my blood test, she said something to the effect of "I honestly can't believe you are standing up straight and having a rational conversation with me" Yikes.
My current medical is about to expire, and as this event is well beyond two years in the past, I am going to go basicmed. I am so grateful for this program, as it gives people like me who screwed up royally once, but just once, a chance to keep flying responsibly.
So here is the question:
If at some point in the future I decided I wanted to go back to class three, or even two, or one, I understand that there are other issues surrounding the hospitalization that I will have to answer for, but this is the one I'm curious about at the moment: What stance does the FAA take on a blood alcohol concentration that shows obvious tolerance, when it does NOT relate to an arrest or a driving offense? Do you get bonus points for "wow, he used to drink a lot, but at least he never did it and then got behind the wheel?" Or do they have one of their handy statistics that says something like "Well, research shows that if you can tolerate 0. 2, that means you have driven at at least 0.15, 40 to 45% of the time...."
this is all based on the assumption that if I ever decide to get a class 3 reinstated, I will most likely need those medical records.
So there is my question, how does the FAA feel about a past high alcohol tolerance for someone who DIDN'T get behind the wheel? and I thank you all for your input.