So... I fly slightly more than the average leisure traveler - probably six to eight times a year - though obviously less often than the road-warrior business traveler. I seem to be the only one I know who actually factors in how to avoid and (if that fails) survive a crash when doing my planning. I'm actually not in the least bit afraid of being in
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@rdhdsnippet, explain more about aisle seats and the back of the plane? the other stuff I do just about as accidentally as the above.
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I have a rule that if the Captain comes on and introduces himself as Captain Godot, to find some excuse to get off the plane before it takes off.
I try to not fly in large aircraft after the door seals pop open in flight.
In small aircraft, I try to fly with pilots who are on good terms with the Jesus figurine on the dashboard, especially when we skirt thunderstorms over the mountains and have to fly through the valley to avoid the storms.
I tell helicopter pilots to never hover for more than a few seconds -- that is when they traditionally crash, after prolonged hovering.
In short, I try to survive by driving, taking the train, and only when I absolutely have to, do I fly. And then I pray on takeoff and landings -- and I'm not a praying type of guy.
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While I pay some attention to the checks, and figure out where, in the event of a semi-soft landing (HA!) where to escape to, I don't really worry too much about the clothing.
So yeah, you are probably a touch more paranoid than the average joe. Of course, that just means you are more likely to survive if given the opportunity.
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Shoes: So if I go down in the Andes that my toes don't freeze? (hey, I fly to Rochester and Boston in the winter sometimes - it's not a huge leap!) I don't know. I think it's a survival once you "land" on a mid-air crash thing, versus a takeoff or landing one. I just figure heels are a bad plan in general in an emergency.
I don't worry about dying in a crash. I worry about living through the crash and THEN dying. Which would, you know, suck. Except I'm not actually horribly worried, but why not take little precautions when you can do so without impacting your life too much, right?
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We're going to Disney in October. Direct flights. Can you imagine being stranded in an airport with a kid who ISN'T AT DISNEY WORLD YET?!?!?!?!? :)
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I had a mid-air return to Atlanta on my way to Houston because the radio was non-functional, and the back-up radio was also non-functional, and they have to have one functional one. Presumably we were not *quite* to the midpoint so they returned to Atlanta (all in all they did a great job... we were only like an hour late, which can happen with any flight!). I wasn't overly worried, but I think AirTran may have a PR issue with that pilot some day... "Ladies and gentleman, I've seen radios fail but in my thirty years of flying I've never, ever seen BOTH of them fail..." Mmmmm... way to keep your passengers calm!
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