You get
that angsty what-the-hell-am-I-doing-here feeling every time you lower your butt into the seat in
that darkened box—that place of toil and judgment you know so
too, too well.
As you settle in you get the creepy feeling that a gazillion electrons are running amuck through your body. You can smell their electrical breath and you want fervently to be somewhere in open air. Somewhere far, far away from here.
As you settle in you get the creepy feeling that a gazillion electrons are running amuck through your body. You can smell their electrical breath and you want fervently to be somewhere in open air. Somewhere far, far away from here.
The sounds in this place—humming fans, thrumming hydraulics, metallic clinks of your
belts and straps, switches being moved—bring on longings for music,
bird songs, barks, anything wholesome and natural. This place ain't
natural.
Its
sights—row upon row of blinking and steady lights—green, amber,
red—compel your eyes to yearn for far stretching blue sky. A lake
or forest. Both are lifetimes from this place.
You're
back again. Back in the sim.
We're in
civvies—both wearing jeans, polos and sneakers. This contrast of
technology and attire serves to link us to the saner world and for a
moment we can imagine we're doing this for fun. We are private
pilots, winners of a lottery, come here to play with the big iron.
But this fantasy, we know, is about to be shattered with an onslaught
of streaming demands on our brains and hands that borders on
violence.
Today is
a short one—only four hours and we're on our way back to the line.
It's a refresher and an introduction to our new procedures, the
products of the merger with that other company. They do things a lot
different and it seems we are being compelled to do it their way.
“Okay,
are you guys ready?” the IP asks as he closes the back door. The
box grows even dimmer. We look across at each other with raised
eyebrows. We nod.
Then the
words from the IP's seat behind us that we've heard a hundred times,
that we'll carry with us the rest of our days. “Motion coming on.”
We feel the box raise high above the floor on its hydraulic legs. We
steel ourselves. Remember Mose's prayer just before the Comanche
charge in “The Searchers”? (Of course you do.)
Thank you, oh Lord, for that which
we are about to receive.
What we're about to receive is that which passengers never see and hope not to.
The much
revered Ernie Gann wrote about the box of cerebral torment 60 years ago, but he called it
a “Link Trainer.” If only the passengers knew, he mused.
His
truths still endure.
Always, I would like to jump in one of those Very Expensive toys, just to experience 'sim' flight. But, it wouldn't be much fun with just a Cessna 152 cockpit layout. It's the only thing I'd recognize. heh
ReplyDeleteNever been there, but I it doesn't seem such a stretch to say that each session in the sim might be compared to Campbell's hero's journey. At least I bet you feel like it afterward sometimes.
ReplyDeleteAnd whether my analogy fits or not, as we remember Denny Fitch this week, it's safe to say that all you airline pilots are heroes. Very much indeed.