Aviation: Chapter Nine
Certificated Flight Instructor - Instrument
Certificated Flight Instructor - Instrument
Certificated Flight Instructor
Astronaut Candidates
Keep smiling, but not grinning.
Keep your humor harmless, pure and perfect. People don't understand irony.
Keep your weaknesses to yourself. If you don't point them out to others, they will never see them.
Never complain; make survival look easy.
You are expected to say something nice after each flight, class, or simulation.
If you can't say something nice, lie — nicely.
In particular, practice saying, "Thanks for pointing that out, sir. I'll really work on that."
Be aggressively humble and dynamically inconspicuous. Save your brilliance for your friends and family.
Remember — whatever's encouraged is mandatory. Whatever's discouraged is prohibited.
Nothing is sometimes a good thing to do and always a clever thing to say.
REVIEW THIS LIST DAILY
Adapted from Michael Cassutt
Title image courtesy NASA
I’ve seen Ben Franklin’s daily schedule before and found it interesting but never really thought much of it.
Then a few years ago, as part of a Strenuous Life weekly challenge, I started mapping out my schedule. I took it a bit further and just like how I give each dollar a “job” in my budget, I give (as best I can, without making it overly complicated) each hour in my schedule a “job” when planning my week.
Take a look at your to-do list and realistically try and map out when to complete those tasks this week. By doing that, you’ll have to estimate how much time each task will take and will most likely then realize just how little time there is in a day.
Shawn Blanc expanded on this nicely when he broke down Ben Franklin’s day into six basic time blocks:
3 hours for getting ready for his day (shower and breakfast, personal study, and prepare for work)
4 hours for work
2 hours for review of current projects and to eat lunch
4 more hours for work
4 hours for dinner and rest and wrapping up the day
7 hours for sleeping
Viewing time in this way (in blocks) really helps me see things differently. Give it a try for yourself and I bet that once you start adding things to your calendar, you’ll realize there may not be time for things like there was previously. Mowing the lawn, phone calls to make, preparing and eating meals, play time with the kids, organizing the basement, sleeping… maybe there really isn’t time in the schedule to watch another episode of Ted Lasso this week!
But I also completely understand the problem with planning every hour and not being flexible enough to roll with the punches. Don’t get caught up in the busy work of it all. And remember that in the end, your schedule is simply a plan. And no plan survives first contact with the enemy.
Air Force Major T. J. "King" Kong reads off the survival kit contents check:
One forty-five caliber automatic
Two boxes of ammunition
Four days concentrated emergency rations
One drug issue containing antibiotics, morphine, vitamin pills, pep pills, sleeping pills, tranquilizer pills
One miniature combination Russian phrase book and Bible
One hundred dollars in rubles
One hundred dollars in gold
Nine packs of chewing gum
One issue of prophylactics
Three lipsticks
Three pair of nylon stockings
“Shoot, a fella' could have a pretty good weekend in Vegas with all that stuff."
Title image by Little White Lies