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"We are the protagonists of our stories called life, and there is no limit to how high we can fly."


PHD. MBA. MHS. Type rated on A350, A330, B777, B747-400, B747-200, B757, B767, B737, B727. International Airline Pilot / Author / Speaker. Dedicated to giving the gift of wings to anyone following their dreams. Supporting Aviation Safety through training, writing, and inspiration. Fighting for Aviation Safety and Airline Employee Advocacy. Safety Culture and SMS change agent.

Tuesday, December 10, 2013

Let Your Dreams Take Flight...

I recently received and email from Mark Jones...

"Sometime this last year, we collaborated by sharing an motivational "focus" picture on your blog. Now I wanted to share a story (and a poster) with you--a story that resonates with both the pilot and the author.  I share them both as a way of thanking you for the encouragement that I get from your blog, and so you can share with your tribe and community.  The story first, and then the web version of the poster which I've attached below. "
And what a beautiful story it is! Thank you so very much Mark.

"As an experimental test pilot, 
I get to wear a mask and fly, 
but that isn’t my superpower."


"Transforming an ordinary piece of paper into something that looks sharp and cuts through the air, held aloft by unseen forces — in the eyes of my seven year old son, this is an unparalleled act of awesomeness.

But giving him a blank sheet of paper and showing him how to fold it, hold it, and launch it into the sky transforms him into a superhero.

A blank sheet of paper is an invitation.

It is a common starting point for many personal journeys — for artists who sketch, authors who write, and for those brave enough, a way to let their dreams take flight.

As a child, I used to believed in the invisible, in superpowers, but somewhere along the way I stopped believing.

It’s like Jake, my two year old son, who used to put on a pair of swim goggles, his “super-Gake goggles” and fly around the house with no doubt in his mind that he was a superhero.

A few months later, I asked him if he was “super-Gake.”

He replied, almost defiantly, somewhat dejectedly, “No, I can’t fly. I don’t have any wings.”

It’s almost inevitable, that at some point, we all lose faith. We stop flying.

As a child, I dreamed of being a test pilot and eventually an astronaut.

Eighteen years later, I had achieved part of that goal. Now I can fly again. I’ve rekindled my belief in unseen things.

Today, still farther along the way, I’ve learned some valuable life lessons.

I’ve learned that achievement is one part rocket science and one part 1st grade art class.

I’ve learned some aeronautical engineering and Bayesian statistics and airmanship and aviation.

Some of those things are natural forces like lift and drag. Some aren’t: e.g., politics, economy, and technology.

And still more, some are supernatural, like vision, hope, endurance, and attitude.

Endurance, for example, has dual meanings. It is measure of an airplane’s ability to remain airborne for a set length of time, a function of fuel quantity and performance. It’s also a quality that helps us transform our dreams into something real.

I believe a paper airplane is simultaneously a symbol of hope (and other invisible forces) and also a concrete example of the wonders of aerospace (especially flight test) — this is why I feel compelled and privileged to share with you, the readers of Lift and Drag, these observations and inspiration.

No one ever tells you that you don’t have enough experience to build and fly a paper airplane.

In other words, we all get a chance to transform the ordinary into the extraordinary and to launch our ideas into the world. Where will you land?"



Sincerely,
Mark Jones Jr.


Mark offers free downloads of his poster on his website. But he also has physical copies for sale too.  (12.5 x 18 inch posters) but they weren't free to produce, so he shares those for a small fee.

Enjoy the Journey!
XOX Karlene

Monday, December 9, 2013

Nelson Mandela: Possibility

“It always seems impossible 
until it’s done.”

Nelson Mandela


A tremor of pain was felt throughout the world last week when Nelson Mandela died. In memory of his passing my friend, Alex, sent me numerous quotes...All equally inspirational. This quote resonates with the task of writing a novel...sometimes just surviving the holiday season and all that life throws your way.

I won't bore you with the details of what has consumed my life the previous six months. But I squeezed time to work on Flight For Safety, after I give everything to everyone else. I've edited on planes, in waiting rooms, in the ICU unit at the hospital and during grand children's nap time. I climb out of bed at 3 a.m. and often stay up until well after midnight to find time to write.

And when I think it's done, I go back into the story and find areas that need to be massaged, and sometimes attacked with a hatchet. But the work never ends...until it's done. I've been cleared for the approach...landing soon.

If I looked at the big picture of my life and thought I would have time to write one novel, let alone two, I would have thought I was nuts.
The reality is... Anything is possible.

Take it one day at a time and when you are done, you will know...it only looks impossible before you do it.
 
  
We might have it for Christmas... 
but definitely for the New Year. 

Thank you Alex for the inspiration!
XO Karlene

Friday, December 6, 2013

Aditya Palnitkar

Friday's Fabulous Flyer


Aditya Palnitkar
Future Airline Owner 

  
15-year-old Aditya was born in Mountain View California and currently lives in Pune India (Two and a half hours from Mumbai) with his mother, father and younger brother. His 14-year-old brother doesn't have the same interest in aviation as Aditya.  But big brother is working on him. Aditya said, "I am always in the process of trying to make him appreciate the fascinating world of aviation."


Wait... did I tell you he wrote a book? Yes, at 15-years-old this young man has a published book: Amazing Airlines. When I told him I added it to my Amazon list to buy, he said, "I will send out a complimentary review copy to you, it's the least I can do since you will be taking the trouble of writing the review." Not only is he talented, motivated and a go getter... but gracious too



My book arrived two days ago, and I have yet to read it, but I needed to give a shout out to the author. I love meeting inspiring young people! And to achieve such an undertaking at 15 is nothing short of amazing.


Aditya Falls in Love with Aviation:

My love of aviation comes from some ineffable, hard-wired affinity that I realized when I was just seven years old. The year was 2003, and I was on a plane flying from San Francisco to Mumbai, India. Instead of watching cartoons, I was tracking the airplane’s flight path and looking out the window at the clouds, fascinated by how high we were soaring in the sky. It was an amazing experience, and I fell in love with aviation.


Inspiration for Amazing Airlines:

On each trip I have taken, I have always talked to the pilots and the crew about our common interest in aviation. In 2010, during a conversation with a flight crew in Spain, they mentioned how great it would be if everyone my age could understand aviation. At this point, I realized that the language and structure of most aviation books I had read was difficult for young people to understand. I felt that an airline book written in a simple language had the potential to inspire interest among teenagers and young adults. Since a book like this did not exist, I decided to write one.



Aditya Travels the World:

My parents’ love for travel has provided me with the opportunity to fly extensively. To date, my journeys have spanned 33 different countries across 5 continents on 21 airlines. Over the years, the countries I have visited or flown through worldwide including the United States, France, United Kingdom, Canada, Japan, India, Egypt, Germany, Netherlands, Spain, Portugal, Morocco, Bulgaria, Czech Republic, Slovakia, Hungary, Austria, Turkey, Greece, Italy, Serbia, Sweden, Denmark, Ireland, Australia, Taiwan, Korea, U.A.E, Qatar, Singapore, Hong Kong, New Zealand and Malaysia.


Master of Language:

(I asked Aditya how many languages he spoke due to his travels. Why doesn't his answer surprise me?)

I speak English, Marathi (my mother tongue), and Hindi fluently. I can write proper German, as well as make and understand basic conversations in spoken German. I can write the Cyrillic (Russian) and the Greek scripts fluently.


Future of Success: 

The airline world also involves many things that books can’t cover. There’s a heart and soul to every place and community, which traveling lets you experience. I have realized that while distant cultures may seem different, they are similar where it matters. The farmers’ market in Paris has the same commotion as the one in Seattle.


Whether it is Stockholm, Casablanca or Tokyo, parks are full of mothers lovingly walking their kids in strollers. I find it wonderful that the only thing separating people is not race, religion or nationality, just distance.

My dream is to start my own commercial airline and use aviation to link these distant populations. This is my goal, and I hope that my dream of a more connected world will ignite a union among people across the globe.


All Aditya's dreams will come true! I hope he tells us when he's accepting applications for employment at his airline.

I definitely see a new airline around the corner. Let's give Aditya ideas on a name. What do you think? Please take a moment to encourage Aditya and wish him the best of luck. And remember to check out his book: Amazing Airlines.  



Enjoy the journey!
XOX Karlene

Thursday, December 5, 2013

The Space Between

T.H.ursday's with Tom Hill

There's a seam between perspectives. It's a thin thing that's barely noticeable. Normally, you wouldn't pay it any attention unless someone pointed it out. Even then, when looking straight at it, you might not see the seam. You're familiar with one side and certainly know the other. What's in the middle, the seam, is hardly familiar, certainly not well known.


 It's hard to see, but it's were the real action is. It's where great ideas come from. Things you don't normally notice come to light from that place. It's the place creatives access for their inspiration. It's a place that has a truth but rationally may not make sense. There's a truth there that probably doesn't feel right either. Yet, it's the truth. It's this place 'between' that is the source of breakthroughs. 

I know people wonder how we get in tune with our creative sides. Creativity isn't that difficult. Doing new and different isn't that hard. We had great access to it when we were kids. We were creative with finger paint, playing with rocks, doing crazy dances for no reason. There were no bounds to creativity when we were kids. Somewhere on the path to being older we lost that connection to creativity. We unlearned being artists.

As Pablo Picasso famously quipped:

"Every child is an artist. The problem is how to remain an artist once we grow up." 

Somehow along the way, the boundless artistry of a child becomes bound. Once, they weren't self-conscious about what they did, but new teens are soon concerned about what everyone else was doing. Once, playing in the mud and dirt was a normal thing. Now, getting wet in the rain running from car to school is a big deal.

 At first straight lines didn't matter. Soon coloring inside the lines - conformity - becomes a requirement. We all know this. We all know all these details, yet we all wonder about being creative. Why does knowing the symptoms not lead to answers? Perhaps it's because the most important symptom isn't seen. We can't see that place 'between'. We can't even recognized it nowadays because we're so disconnected from it. Yet, we used to live there all the time when we were young.


It might help if I described this place 'between' with a few more details. Literally, it's the place between positions. It's the place between the rational mind and the feeling heart. It's the place between order and confusion. It's the place between euphoria and pain. It is the place where Yin and Yang meet, where hot and cold merge, where black continues into white. It's a place that's difficult to define because we tend to live on one side of or the other - we do not live on it. Yet, when we were kids, there were no lines. When we were younger, we lived oblivious to borders.

Now, those seams define our lives yet we have no idea they exist. We tend to live on one side of seam or the other. Instead of seeing something where the sides come together, we only see a gulf when looking towards the other side. The gulf appears impassible and distinct. We are so firmly rooted in our side that we are surprised to find our side cannot exist without the other. Light can not live separately from dark. Black is defined by white. Good only exist because of evil. There would be no life without death. Without the joining of the two sides, neither side would exist. That seam, the space 'between', is important.

Why is this place important? Because recognizing and living on the seam, holding both sides as valid simultaneously, gives rare insight. It gives a view of the world others firmly rooted on their own sides can't see. It's like being on an earth where everyone only knows their side and therefore thinks the earth is flat. There is no crossing over. There is no other perspective. Yet you, in that space 'between', can see the earth is not flat. There is life beyond that boundary. It's like knowing there are three dimensions in a world full of people who are only aware of two dimensions.

I'm bringing this up because there is much magic that can happen when you live on that seam, in the place 'between.' When working a big project and you get stuck on a yes or no question, perhaps there's a better position than simply answering yes or no. Perhaps there's a more insightful perspective than simply sitting on one side of the seam versus the other.

Today's day and age is full of challenge some of which our previous training has us ill-prepared to deal with. In our aviation world, there's an assault on how we train, what's required for qualifications, for what's expected of us. The assault is led by many who have no perspective of the intricacies of aviating, yet their threat is real. Without burying our craniums in the sand, what can one do when things such as a common language might not exist. The easy answer is to be creative--to imagine what's not possible. But, what's that? Well, perhaps sitting on that seam, operating where the perspectives shift is the position where creativity can spring forth, to see solutions where none were available before.

The challenge is to avoid being firmly rooted on one side or the other, to see those spaces 'between' for solutions to vexing problems This thought process is only a model. The model is not the 'truth' in that truth comes in many forms. Thinking about that seam, where the space 'between' lives, will definitely give you insight you didn't have previously.

Cheers
Tom

Note: Photos are from Toms trip to Bosque Del Apache NWR in Central NM

Wednesday, December 4, 2013

What I Want "Aviation" For Christmas

Blogging in formation is at it again and this month our theme is...

"What I want 
under the Christmas Tree." 



This week we are supposed to write about something we want under the tree, aviation related. The problem I'm having with this is that I don't want anything under my tree except my grandchildren and the magic of Christmas.
This time of year is about giving, not getting
So what do I want that is Aviation related under my tree? Here you go...

I want Cecilie to win the drawing and get her Visa to come fly in the U.S. with me!
I want Alex to do incredible on his test, and get into the university to make all his dreams come true...he's worked so hard. 
I want Ryan to get a Visa so he can work wherever he wants, and find a perfect job. I want all his dreams to come true.
I want Jeremy to win the lottery so he can work less and fly more, and get his ratings and flight time. 
I want Daniel to get that interview!
I want Jun to find his place in the sky and always find joy.

I want Victoria and Mirelle to make Women of Aviation a huge success and change those numbers!
I want Natan, Swayne, Melissa, Aisling, Mima, Katja, Julia and all the aviation students to find the strength, courage and commitment to keep working hard to make their dreams come true and always fly safe. I would love to see your success under my tree.

I want Brent, Dan, Andrew, Ron and Eric, my Blogging in Formation Friends, to fulfill their dreams. May all your writing and flying endeavors be a huge success.

I want Syd Blue to get her funds and make her aviation movie!

I want Mark L Berry's memoir 13,760 Feet – to be a huge success. And for him to know I have not forgotten and as soon as I have a voice again, I'm recording. 

I want my friends at Aviation Universe to keep their dreams alive and have much success for the new year. 
I want Marc Medley to keep making music and sharing his love of reading, aviation and gifts to education. 
I want Zyola to have a Happy Birthday today...I wish she could have the pampered week that she deserves.
I want Christine to find all her aviation dreams wherever the wind blows and to have a Happy Birthday tomorrow!  
I want Amanda to keep beating that sky into submission and find her perfect hover job! 
I want  everyone to believe in themselves and make all their dreams come true. Aviation is a gift. Airplanes make you look up! There is something to be said for that. Keep your spirits and your plane up through the holidays.

Have a wonderful December... 
What do you want under your tree?
Happy Holidays!
XO Karlene   
"What I want under the Christmas Tree." 
The series runs from December 1 - 6, 2013

 
Dec. 1: iFLYblog – Brent Owens
Dec. 2: Airplanista – Dan Pimentel
Dec. 3: Smart Flight Training – Andrew Hartley
Dec. 4: Flight to Success – Karlene Petitt
Dec. 5: House of Rapp – Ron Rapp
Dec. 6: Adventures of Cap’n Aux – Eric Auxier

Tuesday, December 3, 2013

Airplanes and Women

A friend sent me this photo and sixteen reasons why airplanes are easier to live with than Women. I had to add a comment for each. What do you think?


Enjoy. Laugh. Please share your comebacks.


1) Airplanes usually kill you quickly - a woman takes her time.
  • Women, do we see a problem with this?

2) Airplanes can be turned on by a flick of a switch.
  •  There are no easy buttons in life.

3) Airplanes don't get mad if you do a "touch and go."
  •  Yeah, but a plane can do multiple touch and goes in an hour.

4) Airplanes don't object to a preflight inspection. 
  • Oh... sounds like foreplay. Maybe you're doing it wrong. 

5) Airplanes come with manuals to explain their operation. 
  • Read Cosmo.

6) Airplanes have strict weight and balance limitations. 
  •  No kidding. So maybe we should not overload our women!

7) Airplanes can be flown any time of the month. 
  • Yeah, right. Try flying through a hurricane season. 

8) Airplanes don't come with in-laws. 
  • Sometimes they do. Called passengers. 

9) Airplanes don't care about how many other airplanes you've preflighted and flown before. 
  •  Smart airplane owners don't brag about the other equipment they've owned and operated.

10) Airplanes and pilots both arrive at the same time. 
  • Nope. I met a guy who landed ten miles behind his plane. 

11) Airplanes don't mind if you look at and board other airplanes. 
  •  Women don't either. It's just going to be a one way flight.

12) Airplanes don't mind if you buy airplane magazines. 
  •  Smart women understand picture books are easier than reading for most men.

13) Airplanes don't comment on your piloting skills.
  • Oh yes they do. "Retard! Retard! Retard!"

14) Airplanes don't whine unless something is really wrong. 
  •  And then it's too late...

15) However, when airplanes go quiet, just like women, it's usually NOT good.
  •  So true!!!

Monday, December 2, 2013

Put Your Mask On First...


 "Put your Oxygen Mask on First"

There is a reason we are told to put our oxygen mask on first before helping others. If we don't take care of ourselves, we won't be any good to anyone. Women tend to be worse at this than others. We are the caretaker/multitask masters of the universe. We do it all, because we can. Or we think we can.

This is one of the most challenging times of the year. More airline accidents occur during this month, people are stressed, the cold and flu season is upon us, and we run out of days to do it all. Remember to enjoy each moment, we never know when it will be our last. Live healthy, happy and strong.

My wish for everyone this month...

Take care of yourself, 
There is only one you

Enjoy the Journey!
XO Karlene 

Blogging in formation is at it again. 


"What I want under the Christmas Tree." 
The series runs from December 1 - 6, 2013


Dec. 1: iFLYblog – Brent Owens
Dec. 2: Airplanista – Dan Pimentel
Dec. 3: Smart Flight Training – Andrew Hartley
Dec. 4: Flight to Success – Karlene Petitt
Dec. 5: House of Rapp – Ron Rapp
Dec. 6: Adventures of Cap’n Aux – Eric Auxier