This post originally appeared on Just is a Four Letter Word
Raise your hand if you get travel anxiety when you fly. Just me? I’ve always loved to travel but after having my kids, I somehow transformed me into an anxiety-ridden mess every time I boarded a plane. My fear of flying was really becoming an issue. But as I started reading more about nervous flyers, I knew there had to be a way to deal with it.
Over time, I gradually became more comfortable with air travel. I’ve traveled both domestically and overseas more than once in my life and I love exploring so these unwanted nerves were something that had to be dealt with.
Many people will tell you to take medication or buy a drink to just get through it, but I didn’t want to just get through it. I wanted to learn what it was that I was afraid of and try to kill it at the root.
I thought about what ultimately made me calm down and I wanted to share my secrets in case you happen to know any nervous flyers. I promise you, each one of these techniques has helped me and I still use them to this day when I start to feel my heart rate quicken.
Calming Tips for Nervous Flyers
Good old-fashioned statistics
Han Solo may not want to know the odds, but I found that when it comes to commercial air travel, it really helps me to know that mine is not the only plane in the air.
In fact, there are thousands of flights in the air globally at any given moment that are taking off and landing just fine. And you know what is really fun? Tracking them! Check out Flightradar24 for real-time air traffic information. Make sure you zoom way out to get the full effect. Feeling small yet?
I also love watching our flight tracker when on the plane. It gives my brain something to do trying to figure out what I am looking at.
Of course, space travel is another story so I guess I’ll leave Han out of it.
Don’t Sweat Turbulence
I had a short layover in Las Vegas on my way home from Phoenix recently. I’d never been to Vegas before so I had no idea what to expect. Our descent was the worst 20 minutes of flying I had experienced in a long time. My fear was through the roof and I spent my entire layover reading about what turbulence really is and if planes can fall from the sky (TL;DR they can’t).
Here’s something I never knew until last year; turbulence isn’t actually dangerous. It’s simply a weather condition. In fact, according to AskthePilot.com, “About sixty people, two-thirds of them flight attendants, are injured by turbulence annually in the United States. That works out to about twenty passengers. Twenty out of the 800 million or so who fly each year in this country.”
This article was so immensely helpful that I have referred to it several times in the months since. I’ll never be a pilot myself, but a little bit of knowledge goes an awfully long way when it comes to combatting irrational fears. I can work with that. Science!
Fly when it’s cooler
Ok, this one is debatable, but if your schedule is flexible, why not? In my travels around the internet, I read that turbulence is pretty closely related to hot air, so if you really really can’t hang with a bumpy flight, your first line of defense is to avoid flying in the hottest part of the day.
That flight to Vegas I mentioned earlier? You guessed it; right smack in the middle of the afternoon. Add that to the mountainous terrain and you have a recipe for one bouncy landing. I try to book my flights in the early morning on the way to my destination, and in the evening when I return. An added bonus is making the most of my travel days with more time at my destination!
Meditate. Visualize. Pray.
What’s all this? Well, it’s about that pesky little fact that we don’t have control over everything that happens to us. True story. This one is a toughy for me as a mom because I want so badly to protect my family and by extension, myself.
I’ve shared my little mind-trick before and I’m telling you it really works! Go ahead, try it.
I sit back in my chair, close my eyes and imagine that I am in a toy plane being held by a giant hand. The plane goes up and down and all around and I can feel all of that movement. But the hand doesn’t drop the plane. The hand gently sets the plane down when it’s time to land, much a like a child would when playing.
Listen to the voices
Not the voices that are telling you all the different ways you can die on this plane. I’m talking about actual human voices. Voices are a great distraction because they aren’t rhythmic. I think one of the main reasons I am so sensitive to turbulence is because my body is very sensitive to motion. I got carsick as a child, I love to dance and “let the music move me,” so when the plane is rocking and rolling, I actually think I feel it more intensely than others.
I’ve tried reading and listening to music as a distraction, but here’s why those methods of distraction don’t work for me. When it comes to music, like I said, I’ll start to feel it. My mind latches onto the rhythm and everything is fine. But then if turbulence hits it’s so far out of sync it actually makes things worse. Reading isn’t quite as bad, but with a book I am acutely aware of every sound around me. It’s a completely and uncomfortably high-tension situation.
The best way I’ve found peace while flying is if I am traveling with someone and we can have a real conversation. The rhythm of talking and listening has much more variety than music and it’s a great way to pass the time! This works if you travel with others. I don’t really recommend chatting up the stranger next to you.
If you are traveling alone, a great podcast gives the same non-rhythmic distraction and who knows, you might even learn something!
Whether you’re flying because you want to or because you have to, the bottom line is, you can do this. Arm yourself with a few tools and a positive outlook. You’ll be back on the ground in no time!
Now it’s your turn! Where are my nervous flyers? Tell me your strategies for keeping your cool in the air in the comments below!
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Andrea Updyke was born and raised in Clearwater, FL where she inherited a love of travel from her parents. Before she was eighteen, Andrea had traveled to Mexico, Israel and Egypt as well as every state on the East Coast.
Andrea’s website, Just is a Four Letter Word, is an online destination for working moms to get ideas, tips and encouragement for everyday living.
I was told by. Pilot that the first 60 seconds is the most dangerous so I count to 60 as soon as the engins start to roar and by the end of the 60 seconds, I am immediately more relaxed.