CerroTorre
Pre-takeoff checklist
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- Nov 1, 2020
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CerroTorre
Sam, I think you've gotten a lot of great, practical advice here. And it sounds like you're taking it to heart. That's great.I figured that's a given. And I guess the question I would then ask, is "how do you KNOW"? Maybe I'm one of those it "isn't for".
But I WANT this. I've wanted it for 30+ years now. Reading most of the posts in this thread has helped a lot. My flight with the other instructor got pushed a week because of storms.
I just need to keep telling myself "I can do it" and rely on the CFI to bail me out if (he thinks it's) needed.
I do thank you all for your responses.
My take is more out of left field. WAY more out of left field. And I'll probably be accused of some pretty out-there, hooblee-wooblee hippy s**t. But I LOVE this discussion so just bear with me. Maybe something in this will be useful. =) I work in an industry where, on a regular basis, I have to help many of my clients work through some very intense (rational and irrational) fear. So the discussion around the concept of fear and how it enables and limits us is a constant part of the conversation with some folks. The interesting thing is that our ability to "succeed" has more to do with how intensely we judge ourselves for our fear than it has to do with the fear itself. It's a pretty fine distinction but an important one.
Fear is an important emotional response to some kind of stimuli. It's there for a reason. Your fear of flight, specifically landing, is (mostly) an entirely rational thing. We aren't evolved to fly. It's unnatural and kinda freaky. =) And in our culture we are taught that fear is "bad" and we should avoid it. Don't admit to it and don't accept it as valid or worthwhile and even beneficial. I'd challenge you to try something. On your next flight don't "pull back" or tense up physically when you feel fearful. Consciously relax and breathe slowly and (most importantly) be open to the emotional response of fear. Practice being entirely open to the fear. As messed up as it may sound, literally visualize specifically what you are fearful of. Walk through it mentally - step by step. In detail. Entirely non-judgemental of what you are imagining.
An interesting thing happens when you are THAT open and accepting of whatever your fears of telling you. You gain an ability to rationally "see" what is causing your fear response. That's a HUGE deal because it helps you to classify it and "put it" where it belongs - in the rational or irrational category. Not being judgmental of your fear, not avoiding it, and allowing yourself to experience it and make open minded decisions while seeing it as just one more, interesting piece of data - can be incredibly useful.
Good luck! And let yourself just enjoy the process of learning something completely new and wild and way "out there" for you.