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A dream too far

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Old 12th Aug 2004, 13:39
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Thumbs up Giving up allows another to fill your boots

Redmania,

After 8 years of trying, how on earth can you now be wanting to give it all up ???? (Taking into consideration SARS, Eyeraq, Afghanistan, Foot and Mouth,911, Financial crises,oil prices.....)

I presume you have educational qualifications coming out of your ears ? You would not have got to a final interview with BA if not. If this is the case, that is 7-10 years worth of hard graft. Then another 7 years of busting a gut doing every job possible to earn a crust to go towards flying.

Have you a PPL ? Any flying hours to show some motivation and that you have some aptitude to flying ? There are some organisations that give flying out for FREE !!!! Have you researched these? Applied for one or two of these wonderful offers. Got off your ar@@ and perhaps become a member. (Don't pm me asking who they are, as have done previous internet lazy bods)

My wonderfully impressive job resume reads

Cockroach killer, Strawberry picker, Sausage maker, Chauff'r, Loo Cleaner, Sandwich maker, Vomit wiper.......oh and for the least paid jobs include Engineer and Finance guru.

Its also taken a few years, but i ain't never givin up on the money so far well spent.

Those that give up, simply make the queue smaller. C'est la vie. Actually, i should be giving more encouragement that you do, it would save all the money on the stamps/envelopes/cv bashing. If you have any mates who are in a similar position, please please explain your thoughts, so that they too might give up as well. Hopefully then, in a few years time, there will be such a big pilot shortage, that my wages will be astronomical.

PS
For a reality check, take a look at some of the hard graft that people in the African and Asian continents put up with to make minor miracles happen....we have it easy by comparison.

PPS
I'm now in need of a beer, anyone care to join me.

Goldfinger
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Old 12th Aug 2004, 13:56
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It's always the way.... Someone offers a beer and I gotta go back to work and drive a bus... Still the upside is, while your drinkin, my flying fund is growing...

OTB
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Old 12th Aug 2004, 13:58
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High Wing Drifter

Your view is common to people who have been born with a silver spoon jammed up their arse! If I may say so.

Touche,

Merlin.

Last edited by v12merlin; 12th Aug 2004 at 14:11.
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Old 12th Aug 2004, 15:44
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Your view is common to people who have been born with a silver spoon jammed up their arse! If I may say so.
 
Old 12th Aug 2004, 16:06
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Back to the topic?

As I see it...

Degree vs No degree
Mega buck job vs the rest of us
integrated vs modular
Sponsored vs self sponsored.

None of that really matters, for each one of those variables there will be people who represent both sides (and who have a gained an fATPL and then a job). And for the most part, no matter which way you get the licence there will be ups and downs and lots of hard work.

Surely the point is that after trying for a sponsorship for 8 years, you could use your initiative and perhaps start to think and plan for self sponsoring.

Its just a matter of adapting to the circumstances with which you have been presented with, either take on the new challenge or give up?

Personally (and perhaps net very PC), if people give up, less competition for me at the job interview(s) next year!!

GQ
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Old 12th Aug 2004, 17:37
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£500 a week in cash adds up to a lot more than £30k a year my friend. The painter works for cash and the customer is happy with the discount - the labourer works for cash and is happy. Everybodys happy - bar the taxman. Its the way of the world.

£500 a week in cash is available right here right now if you are willing to labour all day. Not a bad prospect if you are in your 20's. Beats not having money being half bored to death at University on a course that isn't quite what you had expected all the time wondering how and when you'll be able to get an ATPL and a jet job.

Honest, if I had a son and I couldn't persuade him not to become and airline pilots - and believe me I'd try - then my advice would be good set of A-levels to show you're not thick. Then a job as a plumbers/sparkies/brickies/painters/chippes mate, be keen, learn the trade as you go, live at home and save like a maniac. At 22 you'd have the £40k you need to move from your present PPL and ATPL distance groundschool to the full CPL/IR Frzn ATPL + MCC + FI rating and BE IN NO DEBT.

He'd have am instant fall back profession whilst job hunting, he'd have no debt, he'd still be very young and he would still be able to apply to nearly all sponsorship schemes as rarely if ever do they ask for a degree.

What's better:

A - 23yrs 225hrs CPL/IR Frzn ATPL MCC and FI rating, no debt and able to pick up £500 a week as and when there's no flying to be done, applying to all the airlines for jobs.

B - 23yrs 50hrs UAS time PPL pending, £23,000 in debt and applying for graduate jobs all over with some but not glittering success maybe securing a 'graduate job' flying a desk for £18,000. Applying to all the airlines for sponsorship if they are offering it.

But that would just be my 18yr old son and obviously everbodys different.

Cheers

WWW
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Old 12th Aug 2004, 18:03
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Cloud69 you are obviously unaware of how much can be earned as a licenced taxi driver in a city like Edinburgh or London. I drive a cab for money and work as a flying instructor for pleasure - although I enjoy working as a cabbie and get paid to instruct, those are the priorities which each occupation fulfills amply
I am totally aware of how much London and the large cities like Edinburgh cabbies earn.

Yes, I have the option to move there, but I didn't intend on doing this as a career, the need to earn and family commitments has kept me here for the moment. Clearly I have chosen the wrong place to live as the South Coast is full of people with huge mortgages and small disposable incomes, whereas up North it does seem easier to earn more as the public have more to spend on luxuries such as taxi journeys. Plus our council (yes I own a LICENSED taxi company) set ludicrously low rates, far lower than London and Edinburgh. THIS ALSO APPLIES TO THE MAJORITY OF THE COUNTRY so my point that one would be better off with a manual job (or driving lorries as mad-jock refers to) stands.

Unless you live in a large city and want to go through all the knowledge tests then steer well clear of taxi driving and earn that money through other means.


There are now too many people with a university background IMHO, and with no real experience of life, and as a rule very little common sense and wherewithall to survive in todays competitive climate.
Additionally there is still too much emphasis on job title in the heirarchy of life. If you are prepared to go out and work it shouldn't mtter what you do. At the end of the day if it is providing a means to an end who gives a stuff??

And quite frankly those that don't believe what is available out there moneywise for doing relatively menial work have never had to try and find it. I shall now duck


WWW

Hear hear.

Too many people worried about what others will think. Too many too young to know better unfortunately.

Last edited by Andy_R; 12th Aug 2004 at 18:14.
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Old 12th Aug 2004, 18:22
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Excellent post WWW, certainly made me think.
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Old 12th Aug 2004, 21:40
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HWD...lol...you took that riposte from V12m on the chin with such grace, you're a proper gent - unless of course you happen to be a lady - so you are! Surely such a sense of fair play can only emanate from the playing fields of Eton, Harrow or suchlike.

cloud69, likewise I am aware of the regional variations in the cash to be made as a Taxi Driver - it's just that I felt you were initially over-generalising the case against Cab Driving from your own experience. Moreover, aside from the extremes, I'm sure there is a lot more middle ground in cities like Bristol and Leeds for example.

WWW, do you really think that an 18 year old son would stick to your masterplan?

From one point of view, youth is simply wasted on the feckless young - and from another, he has to make his own way and learn from his own mistakes. In any case, there is more to life than spending your youth remorselessly paving your way towards scrambling to the top of the heap.

Judging by the deafening silence from redmania, perhaps MJR was right...

Is this not a wind up?
otherwise:-

SHAPE UP MAN, YOUR A SLACKER...YOU WANNA BE A SLACKER FOR THE REST OF YOUR LIFE?
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Old 13th Aug 2004, 07:03
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Blackshift,

Paddington Comprehensive actually
 
Old 13th Aug 2004, 09:29
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Basically what your talking about is illegal labour with no prospects www

Sign me up right now!
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Old 13th Aug 2004, 11:55
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If you call a self sponsered ATPL with little or no debt, no prospects then yes!

I dont think you would be the only person in the country labouring for cash in hand.
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Old 13th Aug 2004, 16:49
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Hang on a wee minute...

£500 pw is over 30,000 a year????

500 * 52 = 26000,

Secondly jobs for £500 pounds are week are certainly not that prolific. Not where I live anyway. London perhaps, but factor living costs etc, and you are left pretty much where you started.

As a graduate myself I do agree with many of the posts here about the worth of a degree. I personally enjoyed doing my degree and the experience it gave me I wouldnt change for the world, however It must be said that many graduates leave expecting the world to be their oyster and sadly this is no longer the case (it may have been 30 years ago). There are many disgruntled graduates who feel that the world owes them a living, (for a time I felt like this), however many 'graduate jobs' are little more than a title. One friend worked as a 'graduate sales consultant'. In truth he was a telesalesman, the only reason they wanted graduates was because they knew that a desire to earn big money (by former skint graduates) could promote the ruthlessness which they required on the telephone to make the sales, which is sad.
This said it is very hard for students, upon graduation, to point to a career and say 'i want to do that', those that do, find that they have to start at the bottom of a very unappealing ladder, which after working your arse off for 3 - 5 years is rather dissapointing.
It isnt easy finding a well paid job out there, some may have been lucky, or be slightly misguided in their views. Factor in the fact that paying for flying cant be achieved without large sums of money and it is easy to see why some could become despondant.




TS

Last edited by tinsparrow; 13th Aug 2004 at 17:13.
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Old 13th Aug 2004, 17:51
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I believe WWW meant £500 in your hand which is indeed worth well over £30k gross. To give an example, I pay my office manager £400 week but she only takes home £293 week. Sure you can appreciate the difference between net and gross without a more detailed example
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Old 17th Aug 2004, 12:01
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I am currently undertaking a PPL, I have 8 hours so far. I will keep ticking away, who knows what might happen. I have also bought a home so hopefully that will go up in value over the next 3 years and I may have the equity to continue with my dream.

I feel sorry for some of you who have not made it the sponsored way, I know sponsored people who do not have the guts and courage that some of you have on here.

Regards.
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Old 17th Aug 2004, 15:09
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I give you it may be a regional thing.

I remember the day when i got my National insurance number aged 15. Great I thought i can go and get work in the oil yards.

Signed up with a labour agency and over the summer hols. earned myself nearly 4 grand doing 6x14 shifts. Although I must admit that my mother was a bit upset when she found out that the work was pipe slinging, shot blasting and drifting. I should imagine its now banned someone that young having to dodge 10 tonnes of pipe rolling off a stack or running an industrial shot blaster. It still makes me shiver thinking about doing a over night shift in the snow up in altens.

In my experence the more dirty dangerous horrible hours the work is the better payed. For most of the group of students who used to work during the holidays they still don't make as much money as those holiday jobs. And student loans got us some rather nice returns on the stock market. My first job as a graduate engineer for 15k was a bloody shock.

Now the skills i reckon would keep you in good stead as a school leaver trying to decide how to get enough dosh to fly.

No degree

1. Plumber
2. Joiner
3. Roofer
4. Carpet Layer
5. HGV
6. LPC
7. Sparky
8. Bricky

Degree

1. Dentist
2. Optician
3. Pharmasist

All these jobs allow you to do homers or locum work when money is either tight or your unemployed and all are very well payed.

MJ
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Old 18th Aug 2004, 07:44
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I know this is a bit taboo, but let's be honest here.

It's little more than the good old British class system which curtails flexibility in these matters for a lot of people.

The gnawing fear of being percieved as declasse.

Well, hell mend them!
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Old 18th Aug 2004, 08:53
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What a load of old tripe, Blackshift!

What puts people off doing manual jobs these days is that they are not brought up in the expectation of ever having to do physical labour to earn a living - and that's true whatever their 'class'.

When I was of late school and university age, it was the norm to earn your spending money working on building sites, in garages, picking up litter or whatever it took. I am from what you would no doubt regard as a privileged background (public school etc), yet I and most of my friends did all these things and more to get money to help us through our studies - student debt is not a new concept.

Just as well we did, as my airline pilot's pay is not enough for me to able to afford to get plumbers and builders in to maintain my house - I have to do it myself!

Scroggs
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Old 18th Aug 2004, 17:45
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That's all very well scroggs, we're all aware of the "student job" scenario, but it's an entirely different matter in terms of doing such jobs in your mid to late twenties or thirties.

Moreover, we are not necessarily refering to manual labour here : HGV or cab driving involve about as much of that as being an airline pilot.

I know plenty of people who are underpaid and overworked in "managerial" jobs who nevertheless gasped in disbelief when I packed in that game to work as a cabbie, declaiming by way of barely concealed admonishment that they could never possibly consider giving up their job to do so something like that, even for double the money! The implication being that I had somehow dropped out/lost the plot/gone off the rails or whatever.

If my understanding of the social coditioning behind this state of affairs is simply "a load of old tripe", I would be gateful if you could explain it for me without reverting to that hoary old chestnut of "gosh, I had to wash dishes in the summer when I was a student!" or whatever.

This is an earnest and entirely relevant contribution to the subject matter of this thread, in that it would have been much more difficult for me to organise the time, money and mental energy to tackle FI, CPL or IR flight training if I hadn't done something like this.

I have no desire to criticise anyone for their background, just a deeply ingrained and almost subliminal self-delusory way of thinking that holds many back from a comprehensive "reality check" with regard to their own personal circumstances and opportunities.
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Old 18th Aug 2004, 17:57
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I'm sorry but cab driving nor HGV driving does not entail quite as much as does being an airline pilot. Not denegrating anyone here but it just doesn't. No Scania or Nissan Bluebird that I know of has as many systems as a Boeing or Airbus nor are they operated by a crew in a lethal environment under the aegis of a raft of law and treaty.

If you crash your truck you make the local news on a slow day...

I actually think Blackshift that there is a change coming about in perception. Who wants a JustAnotherDegree and a McJob these days? Prestige and acceptance is turning towards being a tradesman.

Who do you have more respect and reverence for? Your bank manager or your plumber? For me it is the latter. I can find another bank tomorrow but not a good plumber.

It seems that it is quicker to earn and save for an ATPL by following the trade route than by following the graduate route. That is all some of us are saying.

Cheers

WWW
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