Got My Head In The Clouds



It was probably almost two years ago when it all happened. I was in the shower, washing off a day of work, when my wife yelled up the stairs, and around the corner. “Jason, your dad is on the phone!” I sighed and replied, “Can you tell him I am naked and wet, and will call him back in a few minutes?”  As I finished making myself beautiful, I wondered what that could be all about. Dad never calls me at home during the week. He knows I’m almost always out on the road. I wondered, with a little worry, if something terrible had happened. 


My instincts turned out to be correct. My pop is a talented pilot teacher (AKA: Flight Instructor.) He uses two of our Aeronca Champs to give instruction to his students at the airport. When I called my dad back, he informed that one of his pupils had landed a wee bit short of the runway. It was by the luck of the draw that the airplane involved in the incident had my name on the door. My first concern, of course, was that no one got hurt. I was relieved to learn that the gentleman flying it was okay. The airplane, he told me, did not fare so well. Her left landing gear was ripped off her fuselage. She nosed over, and her prop ran into the ground (Instantly meaning an engine rebuild would be necessary.) There was little doubt she would be out of the sky for quite some time. I didn’t feel anger. I did feel a sense of hollowness. As sorrowful as learning about the incident made me feel, I was very thankful that she was not completely destroyed. That would have been devastating, especially after knowing her since I was about sixteen years old. I am forty now. My relationship with that airplane is probably a few months longer than that I have with my wife.


It serves you no purpose to tell you how long two years without her seemed to take. I would go to fly dad’s champ when I could, and I would visit mine. She would move from the maintenance hangar, to our hangar, and back again, as her doctor’s schedule would allow. On almost every visit, I would run my finger along her wing and whisper quietly, “Soon baby, soon.” Seeing progress made me happy. Better news was relayed by my father: He planned to upgrade her engine substantially, since the whole thing had to be ripped apart anyhow. He also told of me plans to install a radio, a modern thing she never had (or needed) since she was born in 1946. All of these things that my dad masterminded reinforced the notion I have of how lucky I am to be his son. Blessed might even be a better word. I love my daddy, and yes; this includes things unrelated to aviation. (Calm down momma. I am not playing favorites. I love you very much too!)


So anyway, two weeks ago I had vacation. I had no grand plans.  My truck was in desperate need of service, and it was my simple desire to not have to use one of our gross spare trucks that made me choose that week in particular. It was pure coincidence that 04E had started flying again the week prior. You need not be a mathematician to know what happened next: I went out to fly her. More than once. And it was good.


There were some rules awaiting me when I first flew her. Ten hours needed to be flown off before she was to be considered a normal healthy airplane again. “Stay near the airport. Keep an eye on the oil pressure and temperature until we know the new engine is broken in and everything is okay.” That was fine by me, I was happy enough to be in her front seat again. I don’t think I’ll ever forget how well it felt to push her throttle forward and jump off the ground after being apart for so long. I smile thinking about it.


Saturday was the best day of my week off. There were cotton ball clouds of various shapes and sizes all over the place. I took off with the goal of flying off some more hours. I knew that I had to stay near the airport, but nobody said how high I could go. If I were above the airport at 7,000 feet and the engine quit, it would be better than if I were at 1,500 feet because I would have more time to think and plan out a proper landing. (If something like that did happen, it would be no big deal. I’ve flown gliders before.) I could tell you I went high for safety, but that is not true. I climbed and climbed because there were things I wanted to see.

 


I spent over an hour between these puffy white clouds. Back and forth, we went, around and around, here and there. I am not sure I can accurately describe to you how that felt. I will open up my adjective wallet and pass you a few that fit the bill: Majestic. Wonderful. Magical. Relaxing. Curious. It was an awesome way to spend an afternoon. There are many things in my life, in our world, that are more easily understood by me than the simple randomness of clouds. The human body, the way plants and trees grow, even the color of the sky in the afternoon on a clear day, it’s all figured out. Every newborn child gets a heart. Plant life gets roots. But how, how is it decided that random droplets of water come together to form so many shapes and sizes of these floating cotton-balls-in-the-sky? What an amazing thing!




After the airplane was tucked away for the evening, I went home and popped the top off a cold bottle of an adult beverage. I sat outside on our patio and picked up my phone to see what the world had been up to while I had my head in the clouds. It was then I first read there was a verdict on the Trayvon-Martin case. Social media was filled with opinions. Some were hurtful. I don’t know. I didn’t follow along too closely because it always seemed to me like this type of unfortunate event happens pretty regularly. I would guess that if either party could go back in time, they would have handled it differently. One thing seems certain: The media made it to be a racial thing. That enrages people and helps with their ratings. Modern-day journalism is disgusting to me.


In the days after the verdict, things just got more ridiculous. I have a black female friend who shared some thoughts that disappointed me. The next day, she said something much more enlightening, then she shared a link that, well, I just wasn’t fond of it. But I did not judge her, because as little as I know her, I can tell she has a good heart. I also did not grow up black. I try to understand her plight. To say that my life was no different than hers would be ignorant of me. On the flip side stood one of my white friends trying to make his point known. He shared a statistic about black on black crime. I paid it no attention because he didn’t share the facts about white on white crime. I didn’t bother asking him about it because I don’t care. The issue is rather black and white to me: There are good people, and then there are bad people. It has nothing to do with skin color. I wish everyone would be good to each other. 


The biggest disappointment in this whole saga is how our Commander-In-Chief chose to speak about it. Here is a Black man who rose to the highest level of the United States Government. I thought that would prove that the Black people are finished with excuses, done with blaming our nation’s ugly past. If President Obama could find such success, so could everyone else. Instead of finding positive words to bring us all together and put the issue behind us, he gave a speech that made it all about him. “It could have been me thirty-five years ago.” News flash, it could have been any one of us. It was an unfortunate event that turned tragic, happens every day.  “I’ve had to experience this. I’ve had to experience that.” We’ve all had experiences in our life that are vastly different from each other. I am not denying there are racists who walk the earth. There are white ones just as much as there are black ones. I am not one. I like good people, and how I treat other humans I interact with mirrors how they treat me. This is basic stuff we should have all learned by the time we finished kindergarten. I am so tired of the division and am saddened that our President’s comments only seemed to open the divide. (Way to go Mr. President.) It makes me wonder if he, and others want to divide so they can conquer. Why don’t all of us, whites, Blacks, Mexicans, focus on bettering ourselves, working to help each other when need be, and move forward? That would be my message if I were President. 


Let me go back among the clouds and clear my head. I cannot stand hate, politics or the never-ending arguments. When I fly, I look down and wonder what to think about the world below. It’s not what I imagined it would be like when I agreed to come here. Imagine this: There are two beings of light soaring around the universe. One of those beings has the title of the tour guide to the other being. They arrive a few hundred miles over planet earth and look down it, and have the following conversation:


Tour guide being dude: “And this is what is known as ‘Planet Earth.’”


Being that is being shown around: “It’s beautiful!”


Tour guide being dude: “Yes, but it’s a failed experiment.”


Being that is being shown around: “Why? It looks so perfect.”


Tour guide being dude: “Well, lots of things went wrong. Mankind has turned against each other, almost from the beginning, and it’s getting worse. It could be an ego thing, or it could be a side effect of organized religion. The wars, the constant man-versus-man struggles are so out of hand that it won’t be much longer until they kill themselves off completely. We gave them a beautiful planet with lush green forests and streams, beaches and deserts. They have sunrises and sunsets that can be nothing short of artistic at times. Thunderstorms and snow, it was all meant to be taken in and enjoyed. Instead, they worry most about what the other guy is doing. It’s a greedy planet. There is a huge lack of compassion.”


Being that is being showed around: “Surely there must be some people that appreciate the human experience….”


Tour guy being dude: “Oh, there are plenty, but not enough. I know some guy given the name of Jason. He drives around in something called a tractor-trailer. He spends his days roaming the roads wondering why everyone is in so much of a hurry. He also has a collection of fifty-thousand pictures of the sun, and he’s not done yet. And stop calling me Shirley.”


Seriously, can you imagine the quietness that these two fictional beings would hear when looking down on what seems to be a peaceful planet? There might be a little solar wind, otherwise, nothing. If they were to descend, the noise would become unbearable once they hit street level. The yelling, the horns and heavy-metal music, it’s all quite terrible. It’s no wonder that aliens haven’t made their presence known; they would be embarrassed to be caught here for goodness sakes. (By the way- airplane noise is completely acceptable. Everyone knows that.) 


The best that I can figure is everyone needs a cause to fight for. It’s sometimes easier to think the way everyone is else is thinking instead of thinking for yourself, tragic as it is. Why that is, I don’t know. We should not be afraid of individuality. I thrive on thinking for myself, treating everyone as an equal to me, and soaking in everything beautiful life has to offer. 


I’ve never written on political matters before, and I do not intend to again. I don’t feel I am educated or informed enough on our troubles. But I do know they exist. I don’t understand the point of dwelling on them or making them worse through back-and-forth hate filled discussions. People seem to complicate matters by over-thinking them way too much, and that dismays me. Clouds, on the other hand, are quite the opposite. They simply hang out, looking beautiful, creating wonder. They don’t talk much, even about each other. These are a few of the reasons I like being with them. You may have read what I have written here and thought, “This man has his head in the clouds.” You would be correct, and I quite enjoy it.




I would like to extend my sincere thanks to my father, our friend Ray, and our mechanic-friend Russ for all of their combined efforts to get 04E back in the sky.

Comments

Unknown said…
Brat..loved the tour guide exchange tooo..just figured I rambled to much on FB..lol...cool stuff

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