Work hard.
Posted: Sat Sep 11, 2021 12:10 pm
If you have lots of spare time to fly, you probably aren't earning enough
money to afford an airplane.
But if you're working hard and can afford an airplane, you probably don't
have enough spare time to fly it. Elon Musk is the poster child for this.
So. What you're telling me, is that you want to have lots of income (so
you can afford an airplane) and you want to have lots of spare time to
fly it.
Especially in an extremely highly taxed country (financially, that's like being
a marathon runner with a 3-pack-a-day Marlboro unfiltered habit) that's not
very common.
In fact, it's pretty goddamned rare.
I know a guy who has a PhD from Northwestern, his own jet (used to have a
C421 with the turbine conversion) picked up his ATP for fun along the way,
and he's now a VP at intel.
Literally one in a million, Dave. Maybe one in a hundred million? How many
people do you know with a PhD that fly their own jet, picked up an ATP on the
side, and is an engineering VP at a major international corporation with billions
in quarterly revenue?
Why do people expect to be one in a million? What early indications lead
people to think that they were an exceptional unicorn beyond rational belief?
I would really like to know.
I had the same problem as a flight instructor. People would show up, and
they would be disappointed that they were not some one-in-a-billion phenomenon
that was going to be a superb pilot, without any practice.
I have said many times before, fly every day for 10 years, and then you might
get pretty good as a pilot. Without that, it's not going to happen. I've been in
aviation for half a goddamned century, and I've never met a unicorn that was
incredibly good with no practice. I've never even heard of anyone like that.
Why does everyone expect to be a one-in-a-billion unicorn? I'd really like to know.
because at least on the surface, it appear to be a statistical impossibility - worse
than 90% of all pilots thinking they are above average.
The harder I work, the luckier I get.
Everyone that I know that is successful, works like a dog, every day. Rob Holland
is the best pilot I know, and he works harder than any other pilot at getting better.
Coincidence?
money to afford an airplane.
But if you're working hard and can afford an airplane, you probably don't
have enough spare time to fly it. Elon Musk is the poster child for this.
So. What you're telling me, is that you want to have lots of income (so
you can afford an airplane) and you want to have lots of spare time to
fly it.
Especially in an extremely highly taxed country (financially, that's like being
a marathon runner with a 3-pack-a-day Marlboro unfiltered habit) that's not
very common.
In fact, it's pretty goddamned rare.
I know a guy who has a PhD from Northwestern, his own jet (used to have a
C421 with the turbine conversion) picked up his ATP for fun along the way,
and he's now a VP at intel.
Literally one in a million, Dave. Maybe one in a hundred million? How many
people do you know with a PhD that fly their own jet, picked up an ATP on the
side, and is an engineering VP at a major international corporation with billions
in quarterly revenue?
Why do people expect to be one in a million? What early indications lead
people to think that they were an exceptional unicorn beyond rational belief?
I would really like to know.
I had the same problem as a flight instructor. People would show up, and
they would be disappointed that they were not some one-in-a-billion phenomenon
that was going to be a superb pilot, without any practice.
I have said many times before, fly every day for 10 years, and then you might
get pretty good as a pilot. Without that, it's not going to happen. I've been in
aviation for half a goddamned century, and I've never met a unicorn that was
incredibly good with no practice. I've never even heard of anyone like that.
Why does everyone expect to be a one-in-a-billion unicorn? I'd really like to know.
because at least on the surface, it appear to be a statistical impossibility - worse
than 90% of all pilots thinking they are above average.
The harder I work, the luckier I get.
Everyone that I know that is successful, works like a dog, every day. Rob Holland
is the best pilot I know, and he works harder than any other pilot at getting better.
Coincidence?