This forum is for non aviation related topics, political debate, random thoughts, and everything else that just doesn't seem to fit in the normal forums. ALL FORUM RULES STILL APPLY.
Q: Is drinking affecting your reputation?
Yes - it makes me funnier, sexier, better looking, invincible.
Q: Have you ever felt remorse after drinking?
Yes - the next morning when I look at the ugly chick laying beside me
Q: Have you had financial difficulties as a result of drinking?
Yes - only when I run out of cash at the bar and they decline the CC
Q: Has your ambition decreased since drinking?
Hell NO - I am also braver. I can kick any ones ass.
Q: Have you ever had a loss of memory as a result of drinking?
DUH - yes. Especially after one hell of a good ripper.
Q: Do you drink to build up your self-confidence?
Yes - Self confidence is greatly increased. Especially when I am going to kick
your ass or jump out of the moving car onto another one.
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Kowalski: Sir, we may be out of fuel.
Skipper: What makes you think that?
Kowalski: We've lost engine one, and engine two is no longer on fire.
I was curious to see if anyone would admit it. I am actually surprised that some people do.
99.9% of my pilot friends and myself drink to a certain degree...The important thing is that it should not have a negative impact on your family and/or career.
And when we hear on the news that some pilots were caught drunk in uniform at the airport...this is a serious call for help.
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The trouble with my life is that I do not think I am cut out to sit behind a desk.
I was curious to see if anyone would admit it. I am actually surprised that some people do.
Yes, I was an alcoholic and got medical treatment for my condition twenty six years ago and have never had a drink of anything with alcohol in it to this day, and never plan to.
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The hardest thing about flying is knowing when to say no
After over a half a century of flying no one ever died because of my decision not to fly.
I was curious to see if anyone would admit it. I am actually surprised that some people do.
Yes, I was an alcoholic and got medical treatment for my condition twenty six years ago and have never had a drink of anything with alcohol in it to this day, and never plan to.
Good for you. I mean it, same goes for all of you that managed to kick it. It is a disease that certainly has the ability to ruin lives like any other.
That said, a little levity is not a bad thing.
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She’s built like a Steakhouse, but she handles like a Bistro.
Let's kick the tires, and light the fires.... SHIT! FIRE! EMERGENCY CHECKLIST!
All joking aside good on all of you for kicking the booze habit, or any other addicton. Having never been there I have no idea what it is like. But I am am sure sometimes the temptation could be there to get off the wagon.
I had an old boss who was reformed. We went into a bar on a weekend road trip one time. He bought a round but never touched the stuff. He was at Christmas staff parties with us and never touched it either. Not sure what it was like for him but I give him credit for being able to avoid the temptation when it was a flowing at times.
---------- ADS -----------
Kowalski: Sir, we may be out of fuel.
Skipper: What makes you think that?
Kowalski: We've lost engine one, and engine two is no longer on fire.
I rarely drink, and rarer still do i drink to excess.
However, if I did, I'd be a drunk. Alcoholics have to go to meetings, and I hate meetings.
My uncle never seemed to find a bottle worth saving for another day. The guy could come home at 4 pm and be shitfaced by 4:30 before his wife got home.
He finally crawled out of the bottle and realized it was easier to ditch the cow that drink himself numb to ignore her. One pass through Renacent Center did the trick and he hasn't touched a drop for 20+ years.
I'm not an alcoholic. Alcoholic's go to meetings. I'm a drunk!
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"The ability to ditch an airplane in the Hudson does not qualify a pilot for a pay raise. The ability to get the pilots, with this ability, to work for 30% or 40% pay cuts qualifies those in management for millions in bonuses."
I lost my dad to the disease when I was 17. It pretty much cost him everything shortly before that.
I started out very careful around the stuff, then let loose through college, became an occasional social drinker when I got married, went teetotaler for a year about five years ago and haven't been drunk since. My wife and I drink together or socially now. Most times I'll only have one beer or glass of wine, sometimes two.
If answering yes to 3 of those makes you a problem drinker, then I am too embarrassed to state my score.
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Twenty years from now you'll be more disappointed by the things you didn't do than by the things you did do.
So throw off the bowlines.
Sail away from the safe harbor.
Catch the trade winds in your sails.
Explore. Dream. Discover.
You need to remember that questionaire is a screening, not diagnostic tool. Answering yes to 3 questions simply means you are at risk of being an alchololic and might benefit from a closer look by a clinician. It's easy to mock ourselves and scores that exceed "3," but, be honest with yourself in doing so. Are you mocking it because any suggestion of you being an alcoholic is ridiculous, or because it is hitting too close to home and it's easier to make a joke than to admit the problem? Regardless of the reason, we all likely know several people each who have ruined their lives, families, careers, health, and off-spring (FAS) through alcohol addiction.