Sunday 2 September 2018

THE MIDDLE-AGED AVIATOR .....

Acknowledgments: Rod Machado

(Ed. Note: For any of you who might be wondering whether or not it could be time to quit ..... it's not inevitable, and Rod provides some psychological food for thought to help you deal with any uncertainty)

“Over the years, I’ve heard many stories about middle-aged pilots (45-65 years) who gave up flying due to a sudden onset of anxiety. Apparently not induced by any specific aviation trauma, nor inspired by the relatively small and perfectly normal decline of reflexes and mental agility experienced by most middle aged pilots. What in the world might spook a 50-ish pilot into abandoning something he obviously once loved to do?

First, let me make it clear that there are probably many answers to this question, but I’d suggest that the most likely cause has something to do with the emotional baggage a pilot accumulates with age. I’m speaking of baggage caused by an unhealthy focus on a pilot’s own mortality, which may result from obsessing over aviation accident data - although there are no doubt many other causes as well.

By the time a pilot reaches the age of 50, he’s been around long enough to hear or read about several of the ordinary and imaginative ways aviators have employed to vaporise themselves in an airplane. For convenience, let’s call this information the dark side of aviation. Long term exposure to the dark side often assaults the mind, lays siege to the emotions and spooks an otherwise mentally healthy pilot. Whatever desire someone has for living a long, healthy life now collides with the memories of those unfortunate pilots who didn’t achieve one.

While clock time is still technically on the middle-aged pilot’s side, he or she no longer feels this advantage. Instead, flying becomes a game of chance, rather than the practical management of risk that it is. At this point some pilots begin to slowly re-evaluate,  perhaps over a period of years, the desire to fly. For others, it’s as if they wake up one day and out of the blue decide they no longer want to soar into it. The net result is an exit strategy that resembles how an engineer behaves when accidentally stumbling into a coffee shop hosting a poetry reading. It may look voluntary, but it's essentially coercedby anxiety.

A pilot surrendering to these emotions is essentially letting the deceased determine how he or she lives. Inasmuch as the NTSB conservatively estimates that 75% of accidents are due to pilot error, we know that fate didn’t hunt at least three-quarters of the pilots involved in aviation’s dark side events (the percentage of pilot-error-type-accidents is really much, much higher). The suggestion here is that these unfortunate pilots made a choice, and they chose wrong.

So what’s an older pilot to do when mortality-induced anxiety compels him or her to question the desire to fly? I’d argue that a good answer is as simple as deciding to have a little more self-faith , and belief in his or her ability to choose wisely in the air.

There’s a very good basis for such faith, too. Living to middle age has to count for something in terms of the wisdom a pilot accumulates. Unlike King Lear in Shakespeare's famous play, few people grow old without growing wise. Surely Bob 5.0 is nothing like Bob 2.0. The later version of Bob better understands his strengths and weaknesses, as well as how human nature affects  behaviour. This is the knowledge that makes us wise, is it not? 

For example, an awareness of human nature may make Bob aware of his desire to please his passengers at the cost of aviation safety. Wise man that he has become, Bob 5.0 now elects to protect himself by obtaining his passengers’ agreement to cancel the flight and reschedule for another day if the weather is poor. 

From a flight safety perspective, knowledge of self (wisdom) is worth a hundred times more than what a pilot may know about how airplanes fly (flight experience). Said another way, age-related wisdom can help us avoid situations where we might have to use our superior skill. And that wisdom helps us avoid situations that require superior skill we might not have.

Based on understanding how wisdom confers a cockpit advantage, the middle-aged pilot with mortality-induced anxiety should find comfort in knowing that he or she’s probably a much safer pilot than he or she allows credit for. As a result, he or she should learn to trust both self and the ability to fly safely as a means of combating his anxiety. 

Is the answer really as simple as that? Consider that, from a cognitive perspective, learning to trust oneself is as solid a therapeutic concept as are the drugs used to treat physical illness. So, yes, the answer can be that simple.

To be clear here, I’m not suggesting that wisdom always trumps the age-related decreases in a pilot’s physical and/or cognitive performance. In fact, some middle age pilots are anxious because they know they’re less skilled than they once were. Wise pilots that they are, they'll most likely opt to fly within the range of their performance limits. Perhaps they'll sell that twin Cessna and opt for a Cessna 182 instead. In this article, I'm speaking only of how a capable middle-aged pilot might overcome mortality-induced anxiety by simply placing more faith in self and ability.

If you’re one of these middle aged pilots suffering from anxiety induced by aviation’s dark side, then isn’t it better to just learn the lessons offered by fallen aviators, instead of bringing the deceased with you on every flight? Let them rest in peace, so you yourself may find greater peace in flight”.

 FLY SAFE!

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