by expat » Fri Feb 13, 2009 5:27 am
At the risk of being heartless, your CO is right. Move on and if you can still go flying. If it was not for the internet, this would have been a sad story that would have been in the news for a day, the papers the following day and then the families would have been left to grieve in peace. Today we seem to have to dwell on death far to much and discuss at length how much uninvolved people hundreds of miles away are effected by an event. During my time at Her Majesty's Service, we lost aircraft, two that I was the last person to spanner on (replacing major critical components ((pilot error at the end of the day)), you may all be horrified to hear, but the way the RAF gets over such things is very, very black humour, no stiff upper lip to be seen. I am not in any way suggesting that you crack a few jokes, but there is also no need for anyone to become consumed by this event. Hopefully this will have no effect on cadet flying. Being an ex-spacecadet, sitting on the back ramp of a Hercules (many, many moons ago) dangling your feet over the edge (with a rather large strap around my waist), as you where flown around the Wiltshire countryside, well I think you can imagine the smile on my face......only slightly smaller than my back seater in a Harrier T10 before myself and the RAF parted company. I do hope that this will not curtail the flying that you are able to do, however, I am not holding my breath.
Matt
"A bit of a pickle" - British translation: A catastrophically bad situation with potentially fatal consequences.
PETA

People Eating Tasty Animals.
B1 (Cat C) licenced engineer, Boeing 737NG 600/700/800/900 Airbus A318/19/20/21 and Dash8 Q-400
1. Captain, if the problem is not entered into the technical logbook.........then the aircraft does not have a problem.
2. And, if you have time to write the fault on a napkin and attach to it to the yoke.........you have time to write it in the tech log....see point 1.