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Greg Fennewald's avatar

This is one of your best!

Sheriffstate's avatar

Mike, this article is such an important piece. The "most important statement in aviation history" “Ladies and gentlemen, this is your captain speaking. We have a small problem. All four engines have stopped. We are doing our damnedest to get them going again. I trust you are not in too much distress.” I love this, instead of "Uh, folks, you might want to say some prayers and think of your loved ones right about now..."

I liken this to watching my favorite NFL team fumbling the ball on the 2 yard line and having the opposing team scoop it up and run back 98 yards for a score, all while there are only 50 seconds left in the game and my team being down by 4 points (after the 7 points added from the opposing team's score).

The Quarterback, (not the Head Coach) is suddenly the focus of "now what?!!" Well, here's the deal: If the QB goes into the huddle and shows the slightest nervousness, people will notice, and then breaking the huddle and approaching the line with sweat running down his face, people will notice. On the other hand, if the QB assuredly fist-pumps his offence going into the huddle, and then calmly breaks huddle and walks up to the line, confidently observes the defense, looks at his offense line and then commands the play call without sounding like a panicked youngster - the people will notice. Either scenario, the people (coaches, players, fans) will notice!

It's not the reaction to a crisis that gets the attention, as much as it's watching with intent the movement of the ones in charge that DO get noticed.

Again, what you wrote: "Calm in a crisis is not a mood that descends on you. It is a deliberate act of transmission, aimed at a particular audience, for a particular operational reason." And: "The failure mode is not the absence of a calm voice. It is using one voice for everyone: either feeding the cockpit a soothing story or dumping the cockpit’s panic straight into the cabin. Calm is contagious, and so is fear. Whichever one you transmit is the one that spreads." Amen to that.

I so appreciate how well you articulate these most salient points. Some people don't take the time to understand what 'assurance' means personally, and some are well attuned to it, especially when an emergency happens. Some think one must be "educated" to know the mechanisms of doing an efficient job under duress, and no doubt education is a prerequisite in most jobs, but being gifted with knowing the instinctual craft of dealing with a crisis and executing it with calm, is well... I guess a gift after all. Clearly, the pilot in this article was a gifted Captain!

Thanks, as always Mike, your articles are Spot On!

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