Over the last couple of days I’ve had a couple of the most
terrifying and exhilarating conversations with Bob that I can recall.
Bob and I had already confirmed that I’d got a plane booked for a
solo flight on Saturday so it didn’t come as a surprise when I got the text
from him on Friday wanting to go over my plan for the flight.
I think it is a testament to our relationship that Bob didn’t even pause for breathe when I told him it’d have to be a quick call because I was currently
in the middle of a field supervising the inflation of a giant gorilla. Either
he dismisses this as a quirk of my British sense of humour or he realises that
my job really is that messed up.
For the record it’s the latter.
As well as going over the details of the upcoming flight Bob took a
moment to talk about the “where we go from here” plan. I’m to review the flight
test guide notes, so that I know exactly what the examiner is going to expect
of me. I’m to get-my-damn-written-exam-out-of-the-way-already (more about that
in another post) and Bob and I will have an extended briefing session next week
to map out a road plan.
This feels very very odd.
At the very start of this blog I likened the whole affair to a flea
trying to climb Mount Everest. I’m not sure I ever truly believed that I would
get to this stage. This stage where my flight test actually feels…. achievable.
I know that everyone gets a little overwhelmed at first but for me
it was so much more. I was terrified of being in the plane, let alone flying
it. I genuinely believed I’d get to a stage where someone would quietly take me
to one side and explain that I’d gone as far as I could. That I’d never quite
make the cut.
It never happened.
I’m simultaneously terrified and exhilarated at the same time. I’m
playing the endgame now. The skills are there they just need polish.
At the end of my last flight Bob and I chatted briefly as he
totalled up my various hours in my PTR, reinforcing what we’d discussed on the
phone. I reiterated how much fun the last flight had been. How much I’d enjoyed
it but as we started to talk flight test again, I turned to Bob and said
“I don’t know how I got here…”
Bob seemed to understand that I was talking about more than the
ferry ride over.
“But looking back, was it fun?” he asked.
I didn’t have an answer. Fun is so not the right word. How do you describe
something so profound, so life changing? Something that has had such an impact
on your life?
I have enjoyed it, I am still enjoying it. But somehow the word “fun”
seems to trivialise it a little. I’m a changed person because of this.
But I guess it has been fun , as well!
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