『This Isn’t a Joke: Mental Health Can End a Pilot’s Career and Your Life』のカバーアート

This Isn’t a Joke: Mental Health Can End a Pilot’s Career and Your Life

This Isn’t a Joke: Mental Health Can End a Pilot’s Career and Your Life

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FROM THE COCKPIT — EPISODE 247 SUMMARY: In this episode, Commander Drew and Dr. Paul tackle one of aviation's most dangerous open secrets — the mental health crisis hiding in plain sight behind every cockpit door. They break down the Mental Health in Aviation Act, which just cleared the Senate Commerce Committee unanimously, and explain why that kind of bipartisan agreement tells you everything about how serious this has become. Then the good news: fatal drug overdoses have dropped sharply across the country in one of the longest sustained declines on record, teen pregnancy just hit another historic low, and a 68-year-old Domino's driver in Boise bought a customer's Diet Coke with his own money — and walked away with $130,000 in tips. The Jet Jolt goes deep into high-G flight and what really happens when your body starts to lose the fight against G-LOC. Ray in Biloxi, Mississippi writes in with one of the most honest letters we've ever received — a 60-year-old man who wants the racism he was raised on out of his head for good. And a Wingman Story that will stay with you: "Watching May's Six."

We talk about:

  • The Mental Health in Aviation Act — what it does, why it passed unanimously, and why it matters right now
  • The heartbreaking story of student pilot John Hauser — and what his letters tell us about a system that left him no safe way out
  • Why the pilot who asks for help is actually the safer pilot
  • How G-forces narrow your vision the same way stress narrows your life — and what to do about both
  • Fatal overdoses down 20%, teen pregnancy at a historic low — the good news nobody's reporting
  • Dan the pizza delivery man, a missing Diet Coke, and $130,000 in tips
  • Ray in Biloxi asks Commander Drew and Dr. Paul how a man rewires himself after 60 years of the wrong programming
  • Ace's Gouge: How to build and keep a real crew of friends in your 40s, 50s, and beyond
  • A Wingman Story about a nurse named May, a man named Marcus, and what it means to watch somebody's six when the room goes quiet


Your Wingman Challenge This Week: Think of one person in your orbit who seems a little off lately — quieter than usual, shorter fuse, not quite themselves. Don't wait for them to say something. Send a text. Ask a real question. Be the wingman they don't know they need yet.

The best pilots in the world know when to call for help. Be that pilot. Thanks for flying with us. Your Wingmen, Commander Drew & Dr. Paul — The Wingman Show

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