Sky Commander Academy
In S9E11 of Sky Commander Academy, we step into one of the most dangerous states a pilot can enter: not bad weather, not low battery, not weak signal, but a mindset. Because some of the worst decisions in aviation and drone work happen after the mission has already started in the pilot’s head. This episode unpacks get there itis: that creeping pressure to push forward because the client is waiting, the light is fading, the team is watching, the travel took effort, the schedule is tight, or the job just feels too important to delay. Nothing dramatic has happened yet. That is what makes it so dangerous. The mission starts sounding less like a decision and more like an obligation. And once that happens, risk stops being evaluated honestly. This is not just a story about pressure. It is a story about how pressure changes thinking. A smart pilot does not just ask whether the aircraft can still fly. A smart pilot asks whether their own judgment is being quietly bent by urgency, pride, sunk cost, fatigue, or the fear of disappointing someone. A professional learns to recognize the mental shift before it turns into a bad launch, a rushed recovery, or a preventable incident. In this episode: 🎯 Why get there itis matters so much: How the pressure to complete the mission can distort judgment long before the pilot realizes it 🎬 The cautionary tale: A mission that started with normal intentions and slowly turned into a mindset of, we have to make this work 🧠 What get there itis really is: The mental trap where finishing the mission starts feeling more important than reassessing the mission honestly ⏱️ How urgency changes decision quality: Tight timing, client expectations, fading light, travel effort, and sunk cost all make bad calls feel reasonable 👀 The warning signs in your own head: Rushed thinking, selective optimism, rationalizing risk, dismissing discomfort, and hearing yourself say, it will probably be fine 🗣️ The dangerous language pilots use: We came all this way, it is now or never, we only need a few minutes, let’s just get it done, and other phrases that signal shrinking judgment 🌬️ Why conditions do not have to be terrible for this trap to matter: Marginal wind, marginal light, marginal battery margin, marginal space, and marginal confidence are often enough 🚨 The moment the pilot should pause: When the mission starts feeling emotionally loaded instead of operationally clear 🛡️ What a better pilot does under pressure: Slow down, restate the actual risks, separate urgency from necessity, and make the decision as if no one were standing there watching 📋 What a better pilot decides before launch: Clear no go triggers, margin rules, client expectation setting, and personal standards that do not move just because the day got inconvenient 🤝 Why outside pressure is not always aggressive: Sometimes it sounds polite, hopeful, or encouraging, which makes it even harder to resist 🏅 Why this lesson matters at every skill level: New pilots need the vocabulary early, and experienced pilots need the reminder that pressure still works on people who know better 🧭 How to break the get there itis spell: Name it, pause it, challenge the assumptions, and ask what decision you would make if the mission were scheduled for tomorrow instead of today 🚀 Turning pressure into professionalism: How recognizing this mindset early helps you protect the mission, the client, and your own standards without getting pulled into unsafe momentum If you have ever felt that internal push to fly because stopping felt harder than continuing, this episode matters. Good pilots assess the conditions. Great operators also assess the condition of their own judgment. See Above. Go Beyond. Get Ahead. 🌐 SkyCommander.ca 🎧 Listen on Apple, Spotify, or wherever serious pilots train. #SkyCommanderAcademy #GetThereItis #DroneSafety #HumanFactors #DecisionMaking #FlightDiscipline #CommercialDroneOps #MissionReady #FlySmart #SafetyMindset
398 episodios
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