What happens if a wing falls off?

An airline pilot has now offered reassurance to nervous flyers after penning a blog which discusses the facts surrounding the topic.

An airline pilot has now offered reassurance to nervous flyers after penning a blog which discusses the facts surrounding the topic.

Published Sep 21, 2012

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London - I've managed to avoid travelling by aeroplane for the last four years.

I enthusiastically spurn the safest form of transport. I prefer clutching onto the handrail of a bus driven by a sociopathic grudge-bearer, or hurtling up a motorway while being overtaken by someone who's simultaneously trying to find a Jaffa Cake in the glove compartment, or walking through Luton at midnight.

I like to travel dangerously, or not at all. And if it's not dangerous, it's got to be physically and emotionally draining; you won't catch me hopping on a convenient 90-minute flight to Marseilles when I can spend nine hours and three trains traversing Europe with a heavy bag and a bad temper.

But now there's a seat on a plane to Hamburg with my name on it. I have no choice but to take this safe, speedy flight to Germany, and it's weighing heavily on my mind - far more heavily than my imminent trip to the kitchen to put the kettle on, which probably carries a greater level of danger.

I've struggled with this peculiar form of madness since I was 18 and experienced my first flight, a bumpy Aeroflot trip to Moscow that couldn't end soon enough. In my mid-20s I said “no more”, and as a consequence made a number of hideous 27-hour coach journeys to Budapest that were characterised by me mumbling “I could be there by now” from Folkestone onwards.

Flying conflates my two most deep-seated psychological issues: catastrophising and a feeling of powerlessness.

I imagine the worst thing that could happen, become anxious that I'm unable to do anything about it, then make a noise like a distressed sheep.

About 10 years ago a girlfriend witheringly told me to man up and gave me a book by Allen Carr entitled The Easy Way To Enjoy Flying. In this book there's a chapter entitled “What happens if a wing falls off?” which begins: “In all probability you will die.”

Despite this, I bit the bullet (and the diazepam) and flew with her a number of times, but the fear always came flooding back. And right now, in the lead-up to my resumption of air travel, I find myself inexplicably drawn to reading transcriptions of black box recorders from crashed aeroplanes.

Which is a bit like dealing with arachnophobia by renting the DVD of Arachnophobia. - The Independent

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