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The Flight Instructor
You don't know what you don't know.
Much of what you think you know is
incorrect.
Together, we must find out why you
don't know what you don't know.
It is practice of the right kind
that makes perfect.
You will never do well if you stop
doing better.
Students never fail, only teachers
do.
A student's performance is not so
much a reflection on the student, as it is on the instructors ability to teach.
Learning is not a straight line
up... let the teacher set the standards of performance.
Much of learning to fly is to
unlearn preconceptions and habits.
The way you are first taught and
learn a procedure is the way you will react in an emergency. It's important to
learn right the first time.
Unlearning is a very necessary and
difficult part of learning to fly.
You learn according to what you
bring into the situation.
Being prepared for a flight save
you money by saving time.
Given the choice, make the safe
decision.
It you must make a mistake, make it
a new one.
One problem is a problem, two
problems are a hazard; three problems create accidents.
Trusting to luck alone is not
conducive to an extended flying career.
We progress through repeated
success; we learn through our mistakes.
An instructor's knowledge is
proportional to the mistakes he's made.
Good habits deteriorate over time.
Accidents happen when you run out
of experience.
Self instruction is the garden that
raises bad habits.
Our failures teach us. If you want
to increase your chances of success double your failure rate.
...almost always. Nothing is
always.
Luck will do for skill, but not
consistently.
The nice thing about a mistake is
the pleasure it gives others.
You're only young once, but you can
be immature forever.
Flying, like life, is full of
precluded possibilities.
Can't do... won't do... shouldn't
do...
What you know is not as important
as what you do with it.
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