When I started nav school in 1975 at the very first class session we were told that Flying Tigers had just retired the very last professional civil navigator in the United States.
Shortly thereafter I ordered a home computer kit (700 1975 dollars!) because I knew that whatever I did in the Air Force, I wasn't going to be a civil navigator, so I figured I'd program computers when I got out. Which I did 20 years latter.
I worried more about the night cel checkride in the T-43 than any other checkride I ever took, civil or military. That's because for the first and only time time I 'pinked' the last night cel practice ride. I just was not able to accomplish six accurate three star fixes in less than four hours.
When at the checkride they told us we only had to do five fixes I breathed a half-sigh of relief. Five was hard enough, but I pulled it off!!
Thank goodness I got selected for EWO school and later fighters!!!!
Years later an EC-130 nav let me shoot a night cel fix for him. His sextant had this cool digital averager. When he plotted it came out in Siberia or somewhere like that, so I felt kind of bad.
A few minutes later he came into the back to tell me he'd done the calculation wrong, and really I wasn't too far off.