
The following is a condensed version of an article
that appeared in the Hartford Courant.
Flight
Made Right
by
Paul Marks, The Hartford Courant, October 29,
2000
Tom
Bunn has done the math: Statistically speaking,
flying on a jetliner is safer than sleeping
in your own bed.
It's
at least 100 times safer than driving.
Every
year, he helps hundreds of people by simply
convincing them that it's so. His clients are
fearful fliers from all walks of life - among
an estimated 25 million nationwide - who are
held prisoner by their anxious imaginations.
Where
most of us fly to Disney World or Las Vegas
or London, they stay home. Where most see air
travel as a door to exotic adventure and career
opportunity, they see looming calamity. They
do more than see it. They feel it in their guts.
They sweat and squirm and suffer at the very
thought of stepping into a crowded jet cabin.
"These
are often very intelligent people," said Bunn,
a retired United Airlines pilot who is also
a licensed counselor. "Their imaginations start,
and their body reacts to it. What they don't
realize is that the body's reaction comes directly
from the picture in their minds." Bunn, who
has run Seminars on Aeroanxiety Relief - SOAR
- from his home in Trumbull since 1982, is on
a rescue mission of sorts.
He
presents technical facts about aviation to combat
scary myths - pointing out, for example, that
the plane's wing is meant to flex and won't
break off in turbulence. He trains anxious fliers
to expunge those calamitous images by visualizing
comforting ones: holding a beloved child, for
instance, or making a hole-in-one in golf. He
sees more than 400 clients a year.
A
Common Phobia
An
often-cited survey by the Boeing Co. shows that
one in three Americans admit to some anxiety
over air travel. Roughly half of those won't
fly. An ABC News poll last fall found 14 percent
were afraid of flying. The response was stronger
among women, with 21 percent identifying themselves
as aerophobes, compared with 6 percent of men.
A common - and ultimately futile - response
is to turn to a pre-flight cocktail as an antidote
to anxiety. Others reshape their careers to
avoid long-distance travel. Many lie to avoid
visiting friends and relatives, or joining their
spouses on business trips abroad.
Carol
Lang, a 53-year-old teacher and reading specialist
from Queens, N.Y., passed up job offers in the
publishing industry because they involved air
travel. Later she got cold feet about a flight
to visit relatives in Georgia. She put her 9-year-old
son on the plane and stayed home, making excuses
about being too busy. For a long time, her fear
was kept secret. "I never talked to anybody
about it, except in the past 10 years or so,"
she said. "I've turned down London. I've turned
down Belgium. I've turned down Amsterdam. I
also drove to Iowa instead of taking a plane."
Jeanne
DePalma, a New Canaan mother of two, stayed
home while her husband traveled the world as
a high-ranking business executive. She recalls
the irony of teaching her kids to take on the
world while she hid behind her motherly duties
to avoid long-distance travel. "I used the kids
as an excuse, and I was glad to do so," she
said. "As I have aged, my fear of flying has
gotten worse." But now her daughter is in law
school and her son is a sophomore at Connecticut
College.
Tired
of getting postcards from their tours of the
Swiss Alps and other places she's never been,
DePalma decided to face her fear. Last spring,
she enrolled in SOAR, just as Lang did a few
years back. Bunn's course costs $390. Along
with two hours of individual counseling, it
uses a dozen three-hour audiotapes. Accompanying
work sheets are sent in to Bunn for review and
comment.
Among
other things, the course explains the mechanics
of fear and the way aerophobes create terrifying
"movies" in their minds, images that convince
the body that doom is just around the corner.
With that comes the nausea, the shaking, the
ominous sinking feeling. It is the elemental
fight-or-flight response, Bunn said. But locked
in an airliner, strapped into the seat, there
is no outlet available. "If they can't control
their situation, they can't control their feelings,"
he said. In therapy, the goal is to convince
nervous fliers that they can draw on their talent
for imagining to summon up comforting thoughts.
Finally
... Free To Fly Lang completed the SOAR course
in May. Last July, she went to visit friends
in Atlanta - on the first airline flight she
had taken in 30 years. Getting to that point
was not easy, she said. "By the time I finished
listening to the second tape, I was afraid I
might fly. Just the thought of it made my hands
shake," she said. "I have a big issue with control.
Two days before I went I was like a maniac."
Then she got on board, met the pilot, and sat
down feeling reassured. She deliberately relaxed
and - much to her surprise - actually enjoyed
the ride. Two weeks later, she was flying to
Maine to visit her son.
DePalma's
moment of truth came on Oct. 10. After a final
therapy session with Bunn, she and her husband
were booked on a morning flight from New York
to Florida, where they had bought a retirement
home.

Fright
or Flight
A
nervous traveler learns to calm her airplane
anxiety and rediscovers her inner bird.
By
Barbara Benham
Nothing
in my childhood suggested I'd hate to fly. My
first word was "bird." As a young girl, I was
often lost in flights of fantasy, imagining
myself a sparrow, a seagull, an owl. Then I
got on an airplane. So long, friendly skies.
Where, pray tell, was that chirpy music they
played in the 1960s movies when airplanes took
off and landed? All I heard were roaring engines
and mysterious thuds.
I
closed my eyes. I knew, just knew, we were going
to crash. We never did, but no matter. Twenty-five
years and countless round trips later, I was
still a wreck during takeoffs and landings,
still paying obsessive attention to front-page
stories about the latest aviation disaster.
I decided to get help. Just then John F. Kennedy,
Jr.'s plane went missing. Over the water. In
the haze. In the dark. I knew I had made the
right decision.
Roaming
the Internet, I found Captain Tom Bunn, a retired
United Airlines pilot turned social worker who
founded SOAR Seminars on Aeroanxiety Relief.
Over the phone, Bunn explained the desensitization
exercises he uses to help anxious fliers master
their fear. His sessions also familiarize folks
with aviation training and procedure. This helps,
he pointed out, because fearful fliers are highly
intelligent, with extremely vivid imaginations.
What gets them into trouble often gets them
out. Flattered and hopeful, I signed up for
a private, two-hour session (at $95 an hour)
at his home office in Trumbull, Connecticut.
I
planned it to coincide with a business trip
to the New York area. I'd be flying up from
Washington, D.C. on the shuttle. Because the
one-hour flight consists almost entirely of
takeoff and landing - my two biggest flight
phobias - Bunn encouraged me to begin my training
beforehand by listening to a set of five audiotapes
totaling three hours, the first section of his
Home Study Course, for all additional $95.
Unfortunately,
I never found time. So when I boarded the plane
for the 59-minute flight, my heart was pounding
as I braced myself for the agony of takeoff.
Mid-flight, I relaxed for all of two minutes.
Then, before I knew it, we were descending.
Mv breathing quickened, my stomach tightened.
As we approached LaGuardia Airport, I looked
down and saw a cemetery. Yikes! I visualized
the plane cartwheeling down the runway.
During
the week I spent in New York before my SOAR
session, I belatedly queued up the tapes. Bunn
starts by explaining that fear of flying is
pretty commmon, even through air travel has
never been safer. About one-third of people
report experiencing some anxiety when they fly.
The trick is not suppressing it; Stifling your
fear only makes it scarier. . . . .
The
pilot-trim, sixtysomething therapist met me
in the doorway of his split level house with
a firm handshake. Gray-haired and hazel-eyed,
he was casually dressed in khakis, Dock siders,
and a plaid shirt. I settled into a sofa in
his office, a library filled with psychology
and aviation books; in the corners were plastic
toys he uses in his other guise, that of family
counselor. As he spoke, Bunn sketched some of
the basics of flying on a piece of paper: the
straight lines of a runway; the location of
transmitters that show the pilot where to land.
One key to flying comfortably, he explained,
is understanding the pilot's role. Another is
learning how to comfort yourself, a skill many
people lose in childhood. To rebuild my self-soothing
skills, he asked me to find an "anchor" I could
use whenever I flew, such as the memory of a
positive, heartwarming experience (he suggested
my wedding day or the birth of my child). In
practice sessions and before a flight, I was
to think of it while holding my hand to my heart.
I placed my hand on my chest and thought of
the wondrous sensation of my three-year-old
son running into my arms after a long day.
Next
he instructed me to use my anchor in an exercise
that he claimed would help me master my fear.
The trick is to remember a traumatic flight,
but in reverse. Bunn suggested I run the images
on a small, black-and-white TV in my head, beginning
with landing and ending with takeoff. Every
time I felt a surge of anxiety, I was to think
of my anchor.
We
ran through it once, slowly. I visualized a
plane approaching a runway. I choked up. My
breathing quickened, my hands went clammy, my
ears grew hot, blood pounded in my temples.
I though hard of my son, and sure enough the
sensations faded and a feeling of calm replaced
them. The rest of the televised flight went
fine, until takeoff, when the anxiety returned.
Again, I used the self- soothing technique,
which let me imagine a flawless takeoff into
a clear sky.
After
we practiced the exercise, Bunn took a brief
case history. Had I had any bad flight experiences?
. . . . As in any good talk-therapy session,
I got everything off my chest. The superstitions
about not crashing if a priest or celebrity
is on board. . . . The bad dreams. "Don't think
of them as an omen," Bunn advised. Landing in
bad weather, a fear that has surely become more
widespread since the deaths of John Kennedy
Jr., his wife, and sister-in-law. "It's not
irrational to hate landing in the clouds," Bunn
said. He then gave a short lesson on pilot training
for flying on instruments when visibility is
poor.
The
next day, I walked through the canyons of Manhattan
playing the black-and-white TV exercise in my
head. Small screen, scenes from a flight, anxiety,
self-soothing with my anchor, thoughts of my
little guy. Sometimes I added my own soundtrack,
that chirpy plane music. I didn't care if anyone
wondered why on earth I was saying the Pledge
of Allegiance, holding my hand to my heart.
The
following morning, I caught the shuttle back
to D.C. Was it only my vivid imagination, or
was I calmer than usual? I loaded up on free
magazines and boarded. No pounding heart. No
tightening chest. I felt as though I'd just
had a massage. Was I cured? Should I trust me
feelings? I decided not to analyze it. I sat
back in my seat. The captain greeted us. "It's
a beautiful day for flying," he said. And it
was.
Barbara
Benham has written for the Washington Post Magazine
and Travel & Leisure.

The
following is a condensed article published on
CNNfn
Fight
High-Flying Fears
By
Staff Writer Rob Lenihan June 28, 2000: 9:02
a.m. ET, NEW YORK (CNNfn)
Whenever
"Andrew" had to get on an airplane, his life
would go into a tailspin. The New Jersey resident,
who requested anonymity, would become sick when
he thought about getting on a jet. "I would
literally get myself ill," he said. "I would
think about an upcoming flight and I would get
a severe stomach ache, headaches, sweaty palms.
It was really terrible. It really compromised
my ability to live." Andrew's case was especially
painful because he had relatives in Europe.
Just a plane ride away, yes, but for the fearful
flier, there's nothing "just" about it.
Andrew
is hardly alone. Some 25 million Americans are
afraid to fly, and experts believe the real
figure is much higher, since many people won't
admit their fears. Fearful flyers talk of shame,
embarrassment and disappointment. They talk
of business opportunities they have missed and
vacations they have never taken. And they talk
of a bottomless dread that has held them back
and isolated them from the rest of the world.
So
do you live your life around train schedules
and bus depots? Skip family reunions and beg
your boss to send somebody else to the important
out-of-town meetings? Or do you get help, the
way Andrew did?
Statistically,
you are at greater risk driving to the airport
than you are when you get on a plane. . . .
The average person would have to fly every day
for 29,000 years before getting involved in
a fatal airline crash. But, of course, if you're
afraid to fly, the numbers offer no comfort
at all.
Tom
Bunn, a retired airline captain who heads SOAR
(Seminars on Aeroanxiety Relief) workshops,
said fearful fliers are an intelligent bunch.
"They can think of 1,000 things that can go
wrong," said Bunn, who runs the company with
Lisa Hauptner. "And they're very visually imaginative.
They can put a picture in their mind of an airplane
disaster in a heartbeat."
Media
coverage of air disasters doesn't help. Counselors
say while airline wrecks are rare, they dominate
newspapers and evening news broadcasts. "People
see the gory images on TV, the families grieving,"
Bunn said. "It's a very emotionally wrenching
experience if you have empathy."
Experts
say fear of flying is often associated with
a major change in your life: a new home, a death
in the family, or the birth of a child."
Andrew
said his fear of flying got so serious his wife
finally went on the Internet and found out about
the SOAR program. He ordered the tapes last
year and has high praise for the experience.
"It was absolutely fantastic," he said. "The
beauty of this thing is that you're taking a
course with someone who is a pilot. That in
and of itself goes a much longer way than speaking
to a psychologist."
When Andrew got on a plane, he admits he was
not as comfortable as he would have been in
a car, but he wasn't having palpitations either.
"It was a wonderful experience," he said. "That
abject fear was gone."
Andrew
is planning a trip to Spain in August and he
has found the flying course has had an additional
benefit. "It spills over to other aspects of
your life," he said. "You just generally feel
better about yourself."

A
Flight School for Letting Go of Fear
by
Eve Nagler, The New York Times
With
her hands on the controls of a United Airlines
727 jet, Marie Garabedian of East Hartford said,
"I feel a little overwhelmed."
Mrs.
Garabedian was sitting in the cockpit of a jet
parked at Bradley International Airport in Windsor
Locks and United Capt. Tom Bunn was explaining
the procedures for takeoff and landing.
She
was not in training to become a pilot. Instead,
she was learning how to be a passenger without
going into a panic. Her recent visit to the
cockpit was the culmination of Captain Bunn's
course called Seminars on Aeroanxiety Relief.
Sitting
in the pilot's chair helps fearful fliers "feel
a kinship with the person in the front of the
plane," Captain Bunn said. "When they're sitting
in the back, they can imagine what the pilot
is doing up here," he said. "It gives them a
feeling of control."
About
25 minutes later, Mrs. Garabedian left the airplane
beaming with pride, confident that she was well
on her way to conquering her fear of flying.
"I feel like I belong here," she said.
An
estimated 25 million American adults are afraid
to fly, according to a survey done by the Boeing
Company. Statistics from the University of Michigan
show that flying is 33 times safer than driving
don't seem to ease the minds of anxious fliers.
Captain
Bunn is a licensed therapist in addition to
being an airline pilot. He has been offering
an aeroanxiety program for 13 years. Captain
Bunn said fearful fliers are invariably intelligent
and highly imaginative people who feel trapped
and helpless in an airplane because they cannot
"fight or flee," the natural human response
to fear.
So,
Captain Bunn said, when fearful fliers hear
a sound or feel a bump during the course of
a normal flight, their imaginations take over,
and they fantasize a horrible scenario completely
unrelated to reality. "It's like they're going
into their own movie," he says. "They conjure
up every television and newspaper picture they've
seen of airplane crashes and actually see in
their heads the airplane they are riding in
going down in flames."
That's
what happened to Mrs. Garabedian. In April 1990,
she was vacationing in Reno with her husband,
Keith, when she refused to take their return
flight home. She went into a panic after seeing
a newspaper headline that said air turbulence
was expected over the Rocky Mountains.
Mrs.
Garabedian had had enough of turbulence flying
into Reno (she remembers it as severe; her husband
says it was nothing). Her imagination had turned
the normal flight into a nightmare and she could
not bear the thought of enduring any more time
in the air. "I was crying hysterically after
I saw the headline," Mrs. Garabedian said. "It
was a day before we were supposed to fly home,
but there was no way I could see myself getting
onto the plane. So we rented a car and drove
from Reno back to Hartford. It took us two and
a half days and cost about $1000."
Four
years later, Mrs. Garabedian, 37, made up her
mind to confront her fear of flying in order
to take her two children to visit Disney World
in Florida this fall. "When we decided to go,"
she said, "my husband asked me, 'Are we flying
or driving?' I said, "We're flying!"
Mrs.
Garabedian reserved plane tickets to Florida
and then called several airlines to get a recommendation
for a fear of flying course.
So
Mrs. Garabedian decided to try Captain Bunn's
program which is recommended but not sponsored
by United Airlines.
It
was not an easy decision for Mrs. Garabedian
to make. "People considering the course have
a dual fear," Captain Bunn said. "Part of the
fear is that the course won't work. The other
part is that it will!"
Captain
Bunn's program, which costs $285, consists of
eight hours of audio tapes with accompanying
booklets and questionnaires. After listening
to the tapes, clients have the option of meeting
with him privately at an airport for an additional
fee of $95 an hour. The number to call to order
the tapes is 800-332-7359.
The
tapes are divided into three sections: The first
includes relaxation exercises and discusses
the psychological basis for aeroanxiety; the
second offers an explanation of how airplanes
fly and why they are safe, and the third gives
practical tips on how to put all the information
to use.

Aero
anxiety, SOAR soothes their fear of flying.
by
Mark Muro, The Boston Globe
Of
course they are the reasonable folk, these executives,
wives and grandmothers who can't quite deny
gravity and trust the arcane laws of aerodynamics.
They
fear air travel and, in this they make sense,
not the rest of us. Unable to make the leap
of faith that is jet propulsion, they stick
to the ground, 2 1/2 hours to Chicano only a
dream.
If
his silky half-drawl reminds one first of how
perfectly he fits the part of a pilot, it suggests
other impressions as well, those of the TV evangelist
and the encounter group leader. Indeed, Tom
Bunn acts many parts as he operates SOAR, which
is based in Westport, Conn. Though he's logged
10,000 hours pilot Air Force F-105 jet fighters
and commercial airlines and races Formula C
cars, he talks eagerly of psychology. Sometimes
dewy-eyed with psychobabble, other times full
of test pilot facts or the bubbly enthusiasm
of a cheerleader on game day, Bunn comes on
as an evangelist of the stratosphere. "
You
know this thing called the flight or fight response?,"
he began as he explained how SOAR works. "That's
sustained man for a long time, I mean, if you
saw a tiger, you ran the hell away or else you
got real mad and put up a fight. But here's
the 20th century. Flying provokes that fight
or flight response because it's scary, but when
they close that door it interferes with the
most fundamental instincts. You can't run, and
who are you going to fight? Flying goes against
all the most basic instincts."
"See,
I don't think people who can't fly are nutty
or screwy or anything like that. I think it's
very natural. In fact, my students are about
the brightest, most sensitive people around.
They're in touch with their fears, but they're
so imaginative they create vivid movies they
begin to think are real. I just try to get people
to realize their movies of planes crashing aren't
real."

High
Anxiety
by
Steve Strunsky, The Messenger Gazette
Bridgewater
- Mill LaMarca's honeymoon in Bermuda was ruined
11 years ago because of her fear of flying.
"I
cried and screamed the whole way," she said,
slightly embarrassed at the memory of that fateful
trip, which left her worried throughout her
honeymoon about the return flight home.
But
when she and her husband, Robert, planned a
second honeymoon this month, Mrs. LaMarca vowed
this time not to let the idea of cruising at
an altitude of 30,000 feet get her down.
The
LaMarcas left May 14 on a two-week trip to Paradise
Island, the Bahamas, to celebrate their 11th
wedding anniversary, and although they have
taken driving vacations to Florida and elsewhere,
until now, Mrs. LaMarca's phobia had grounded
hopes of dream vacations overseas.
"Basically,
I can't feel comfortable at 30,000 feet in the
air," she said in an interview before leaving.
"To me it's not natural. I know my fear is irrational,
but I can't help that. I know its safe to fly,
you can tell me the statistics, but it doesn't
matter."
When
her husband took a job with London-based Barclay's
Bank, requiring him to make occasional trans-Atlantic
flights, she decided it was time to overcome
her fear.
To
do that, she contacted Captain Thomas Bunn,
something of a pioneer in the field of "aeroanxiety,"
as he calls it.
Capt.
Bunn is a former Air Force fighter pilot who
now flies for United Airlines. He has combined
his 23 years experience as a commercial pilot
with a batchelor's degree in psychology and
a master''s in clinical social work to develop
a program known as SOAR, or Seminars on Aeroanxiety
Relief.
The
program combines therapy sessions and a thorough
tour of a cockpit, visits to local airports
to watch take-offs and landings, and listening
to cassettes at home.

"Unfriendly
Skies"
by
Eloise Salholz, Tessa Namuth, Marsha Zabarsky,
Darby Junkin, and Tenley-Ann Jackson, Newsweek
As
a little boy, Paul delighted in fashioning model
airplanes out of the buoyant, honey-colored
wood of the balsa tree. He carried his passion
into adulthood, building ever more sophisticated
planes that he flew by remote control in a meadow
near his San Francisco home. His gracefully
executed circles and loops won prizes in several
local aviation-club competitions. Happily, since
the hospital-equipment technician had to crisscross
the country to make repairs, he also enjoyed
being a passenger. But shortly after logging
his 150,000th air mile, the airplane aficionado
went into a tailspin: as his 747 en route from
Los Angeles went through a thunderhead, Paul
went into a cold-sweat panic. When the plane
touched down in San Francisco, he brushed the
scare off with a "Glad that's over with" and
determined not to let it ground him. But the
anxiety recurred and, after a terror-filled
flight from Atlanta 18 months ago, Paul vowed
to bail out for good. "I felt flying wasn't
good for me or my body," says Paul, who to protect
his job credibility, does not want his surname
used. "I was quitting."
Journey:
Paul, 37, is one of the estimated 25 million
Americans, according to a 1977 Boeing survey,
with a fear of flying. His fellow suffers have
included some first-class travelers: Ronald
Reagan's political ambitions had to overcome
his aerophobia before he could run for governor
of sprawling California, and soul singer Aretha
Franklin recently canceled several concert dates
to avoid leaving terra firma. The aerophobe
wears many faces: some run down the aisle screaming,
"Stop the plane," as it taxis toward the runway;
others endure the trip only through an alcohol-
or sedative-induced haze. Many fearful fliers
are in fact terrified of being shut up in a
confined space thousands of feet above the ground;
ex-Oakland Raiders head coach and claustrophobe
John Madden, for example, takes Amtrack coast
to coast to do his TV broadcasts rather than
watch the stewardess close those doors. Aeroanxiety
can also encompass fear of the unknown and of
losing control. "When people go on an airplane
journey, it's very similar to the journey of
life," says Pan American pilot Tom Bunn, who
has run SOAR (Seminars on Aeroanxiety Relief)
workshops . . . .
Aerophobes
are now finding it somewhat easier to confront
their fears, thanks to the approximately two
dozen courses that, like SOAR, have sprung up
in recent years . . . . The privately run programs
offer instruction in everything from relaxation
techniques and emergency procedures to airplane
maintenance and aerodynamics, "By the end, participants
know why flights are bumpy and why the wings
won't fall off," says psychologist Neil Johnson
. . . .
Last
week, Pan Am pilot Bunn steered 12 white-knuckled
SOAR enrollees through a terrifying rite of
passage: a one-hour graduation flight from Boston
to New York that capped off the five session
course. . . . . Business Bob DeBrave, on his
first flight ever, was accompanied by his fiancee
who promised to give up smoking if he took to
the air. . . . .
Paul
turned to Dr. Habib Nathan's Phobia Clinic in
San Antonio. Over the next six weeks, he talked
out his fears in individual and group-therapy
sessions, rode up and down escalators and took
an exploratory trip out to the airport in preparation
for a short hot to Houston. Now, with several
local flights under his belt, he's gearing up
for a long ride east. "My hands may get a little
sweaty," he say. "But that's fine with me. The
panic is gone."

"How
Flight-Phobic Executives Face Their Plane Fear
Head-On"
When
the Wall Street Journal assigned staff writer
Cassell Bryan-Low an article on business travel
and fear of flying, she contacted SOAR.
Lisa
Hauptner contacted the business people who had
recently completed the SOAR Program.
Cindy
Dooley and Fred Melamed bravely volunteered
to be interviewed.
Ms.
Dooley is the senior account executive of Chicago
advertising agency Draft Worldwide.
Mr.
Melamed anchored the CBS Sports coverage of
the 1998 Winter Olympics in Nagano, Japan.
The
part of the article which relates to Ms. Dooley
and Mr. Melamed is included below.
By
Cassell Bryan-Lo
THE WALL STREET JOURNAL INTERACTIVE EDITION,
February 1, 1999
While
advertising executive Cindy Dooley sat on the
plane, waiting for takeoff on twice-monthly
flights to visit clients, she would break into
a nervous sweat, her heart pounding and her
stomach plagued by jitters.
She
recalls how she would interpret each thumping
noise as an engine malfunction, signaling the
imminent crash of the plane. So, for three years,
the senior account executive of Chicago advertising
agency Draft Worldwide popped tranquilizers
or swilled drinks to get through flights.
"I
hated flying, and the more I did it, the worse
it became," she says. Eventually, the anxiety
was so intense it became a factor in her leaving
her job.
Ms.
Dooley can take some comfort in the fact that
she is not alone. A study done by Boeing Co.
estimates that 25 million people in the U.S.
-- are fearful or anxious fliers. . . .
Statistically,
people are much more likely to die from falling
in their own homes than during air travel. Indeed
preliminary data from the National Transportation
Safety Board lists zero fatalities in 1998 involving
a scheduled U.S. commercial flight. But the
numbers do little to assuage passengers' fears.
. . .
Ms.
Dooley says she would spend an entire trip worrying
about the return flight. "I had to exert a lot
more energy to do normal tasks because I was
preoccupied with the flight," she says.
Shaking
The Fear . . . .
Counseling
is used to determine the root of the anxiety,
and relaxation exercises are taught to help
deal with the physical symptoms of anxiety.
Tom
Bunn, a retired flight captain, explains this
is important, as many people will take a cue
from their own reactions, assuming that because
their heartbeat is racing, there must be danger.
Confronting
the Abyss
For
some people, the greatest motivation to overcome
the fear of flying is a great career opportunity.
Fred Melamed's phobia prevented him from setting
foot in an aircraft for 25 years. As a voice-over
artist for CBS Sports, his work required little
travel out of his hometown of New York. When
required to travel, Ms. Malamed would spend
2 1/2 days on a train rather than take a five-hour
flight.
But
earlier this year, he was offered the chance
to work at the 1998 Winter Olympics in Nagano,
Japan. For him, it was an opportunity too good
to miss. "I had to do it, " he says. "It was
like a million dollars in a bag -- I just had
to pick it up."
Prompted
to seek counseling, he successfully managed
to take the 13-hour flight to Tokyo with only
a brief spell of anxiety. Since then, Mr. Melamed
has flown to London and Paris and has plans
to go back. In terms of his career, he says
"I can now consider things that I wouldn't otherwise
have."

Public
Radio International's "The Savvy Traveler."
Public
Radio International's "The Savvy Traveler" featured
SOAR on its October 24, and October 31, 1997
broadcasts hosted by Rudy Maxa, a Washington-based
colunist for msnbc.com, and contributing writer
for Worth and Forbes magazines.
The
broadcast was produced by Michelle Kholos, winner
of a Massachusetts Broadcasters Honorable Mention
for her documentary "Dr. Martin Luther King
Jr., His Legacy Today."
Rudy:
Last week during the question and answer segent
of our program I had an unexpected question
about flying from our Associate Producer Michelle
Kholos. As it turns out Michelle is afraid of
flying . . . now we have a Savvy Traveler staff
member afraid of flying. So I've got Michelle
here with me and on the phone we have Captain
Tom Bunn a former airline captain and the creator
fifteen years ago of a fear of flying cassette
course called SOAR which stands for Seminars
On Aeroanxiety Relief. Now Captain Bunn we've
got your course for Michelle but she has to
get on a plane this weekend so we though we
could have a little chat here to help her speed
the process along. First of all, Michelle, tell
us exactly what it is you're afraid of, about
flying.
Michelle:
I am afraid of turbulence. I don't mind takeoff
and I don't mind landing - I don't love 'em,
but I don't mind them. But it's bouncing around
in the air unexpectedly that terrifies me.
Tom:
Well first Michelle, let me tell you that the
airplanes are built to take not only the amount
of turbulence that you get in ordinary flight
but about five times that much, so structurally
. . . strengthwise . . . the airplane can handle
it. What we are really talking about is psychologically
even if you know the airplane can handle it,
is it still a problem for you?
Michelle:
Yes.
Tom:
O.K.
Michelle:
I don't like the way it feels.
Tom:
I would imagine it has something to do with
the fact that you are up high and you think
if something goes wrong, you are going to have
a long way to fall.
Rudy:
That brings us to the question of what us
fear is flying usually about . . . is it someone
who is afraid of dying, or it someone who is
afraid of losing control, or both?
Tom:
The problem with flying is it puts you in a
situation where you have no control.
Rudy:
So people are afraid . . . they are afraid of
losing control and afraid of dying as a result.
Tom:
Exactly.
Rudy:
All right. If you took an average commercial
plane . . . let's say there are 250 seats on
a plane, Captain Bunn, how many . . . what percentage
of the people in that plane do you think suffer
from some degree of fear of flying?
Tom:
Well, on the plane itself, I'm not sure, but
Boeing did a survey and they said that about
one person out of three has a problem with flying
and of those people half won't fly at all, and
the other half fly with great difficulty.
Rudy:
All right. So what can a fearful person do in
advance of a flight to be less fearful?
Tom:
Well, the first thing I would suggest they do
is they take their time about getting on the
plane. A lot of people will rush to the airport
to try to block the feelings from their awareness
and then suddenly they realize, "Oh my God,
What have I gotten myself into!" It's much better
to make sure that you take your time and do
things very deliberately and try to keep your
stress under control throughout the whole day.
And then secondly, my suggestion is, get on
the airplane early and go straight up to the
cockpit . . . introduce yourself to the captain
. . . let the captain know . . . don't be cutesy
. . . just tell the captain, "Look, I know that
flying is OK because you guys do it, but I don't
feel good about it." And then just see what
happens. You're going to find that you've got
someone who really does understand how you feel.
Rudy:
One of the clichés of flying is it's the safest
mode of transportation. More people get killed
by lightening every year than die in plane accidents.
Is this a true cliché?
Tom:
It is true. You're actually safer if you are
on an airplane than staying home at night and
sleeping in your own bed, but it doesn't feel
that way. Rudy: OK. So, Mich . . .
Michelle:
Wait a minute.
Rudy:
Go ahead.
Michelle:
I'm sorry. I just want to understand this. It's
safer for me to be on a plane than to be sleeping
in my own home?
Tom:
Sure it is! That's actually the statistics.
Michelle:
I can't believe that.
Tom:
I know. All right, maybe let's try instead of
pushing it that far . . . just think about the
risks you take every day. You see, we tend to
think that the things that we every day are
totally safe. Everything you do has a certain
amount of risk. Flying is just another risk
but it happens to be a smaller risk than almost
anything you do during the day.
Rudy:
Are you feeling better Michelle?
Michelle:
I'm feeling a little better . . . I'm just
wondering if there's anything I can do on the
plane. I know that you've got some meditations
in your tape course and I haven't had a chance
to run through them just yet, but . . . you
know . . . any little bits of advice while I'm
actually sitting there on the plane and we're
bumping along.
Tom:
Sure. Most people are very visual. They make
pictures in their mind and the pictures are
so vivid it gets them in trouble. Get yourself
a dozen magazines with big splashy ads. They
are intended to impact you. You might even want
to bring a Walkman with some tapes, but visually
. . . if you can block the visual imagination
you can stay out of trouble, and you can do
that by giving yourself some real to look at.
Rudy:
Captain, I thank you for joining us. The good
news is of course Michelle will be not so afraid
of flying. The bad news is she's going to be
afraid to sleep in her own bed at night.
Michelle:
(laughs)
Tom:
Oh, my goodness. Sorry I did that . . . we'll
have a new course for that.
Rudy:
Thanks Captain, and Michelle, have a lovely
flight this weekend. The following fear of flying
segment was aired on "The Savvy Traveler " on
October 31,1997.
Rudy:
. . . fear of flying is high on the list of
travel worries. As a matter of fact, according
to a Boeing study one out of three Americans
is afraid to fly. Not the least of whom is Savvy
Traveler's Michelle Kholos. Well, we couldn't
have that. So we enrolled Michelle in a course
designed to help her get over her fear, and
now we're putting her on a plane to see if it
worked. We join Michelle in a boarding area
at Los Angeles International Airport.
Michelle:
Well, I followed the course instruction and
arrived early so I wouldn't be stressed out
before getting on the plane. Naturally, my flight's
delayed which is giving me lots of extra time
to panic, so I'm just sitting here trying not
to imagine all the terrifying reasons the plane
is delayed. Oh, good. It looks like we're just
about ready to board. Now, once I get on the
plane, the first thing I'm supposed to do is
meet the flight crew.
Captain:
My name's Mike. I'm the captain of this flight.
Michelle:
And you're feeling good today . . . you're
feeling cofortable . . . ready to fly ... .
Captain:
I feel good every day. Sure.
Michelle:
My biggest problem is turbulence. So, where
do you recommend is the best place to sit when
it's turbulent?
Captain:
Generally, it's smoother towards the front.
Michelle:
So when we're hitting that turbulence, do you
know that it's coming?
Captain:
Most of the time, yeah, it is predictable
and you can avoid a lot of it. In the winter
time sometimes there's just not much you can
do . . . it's bumpy at all the altitudes.
Michelle:
But there's nothing for me to worry about
when we're bouncing around?
Captain:
No, no. There really isn't. The planes are
safe.
Michelle:
Well, what's your advice for someone like me
who can get spooked up in the air?
Captain:
What I usually say is we all have families,
too. Our lives are in this airplane, too, so
we're not in any hurry to do anything scary
or dangerous.
Michelle:
I actually find a lot of comfort in that. When
I fly my life is a multitude of unsavory scenarios
each ending with my plane crashing into an uncharted
mountain somewhere. Knowing that the captain
isn't a kamikaze pilot with a death wish eliminates
at least one plot line.
P.A.
announcement: "The flight attendants are
coming around to see make sure that your seat
belts are fastened, tray tables in their full
upright position, all carry on luggage completely
stowed . . . ."
Michelle:
OK. Seat belt . . . check. Gum . . . check.
Magazine . . . check. This looks like a nice
group of people, not the kind of group that
should die tragically in an airplane crash.
OK. The plane is vibrating. We're starting to
go . . . . Uhhhh. Up we go. OK. We're going
up. We're definitely going up. OK. We're up!
We're off the ground. (Sigh) Oh my God, we're
bumping so much. All right. OK. I think we're
leveling out a little bit. I'm trying to keep
my mind occupied with my list of statistics.
The stairs in my home, if I had stairs, are
ten times more dangerous than flying. Being
in my car is two-hundred and sixty-six times
more dangerous than flying. I'm starting to
feel better until Robert my seat-mate puts in
his two cents.
Robert:
I almost died in a plane crash, so
Michelle:
You did?
Robert:
We didn't crash, but the plane went out of control
for about forty seconds.
Michelle:
And you still get back in planes?
Robert:
Well, it was a prop plane like a little Cessna
182. This is like different. This is very, very
different.
Michelle:
Robert's experience is not typical, I keep
telling myself . . . I need some reassurance.
Betty Tomavich is our head flight attendant.
So much for reassurance. Surprising, Betty tells
me she also gets afraid sometimes.
Betty:
I do. During turbulence.
Michelle:
Turbulence bothers you, too?
Betty:
Uh huh. Yeah. Michelle How do you keep yourself
going?
Betty:
Well, I know that I'm safer up here than I am
in my car. I know that. That's an intellectual
thing. It's like going over a bumpy road. And
the airplane is quite capable of going over
a bumpy road, just like a car. Boeing does a
very good job with these airplanes. They're
pretty smart people, you know.
Michelle:
OK. That makes me feel better. And I've been
doing the recommended relaxation exercises,
rotating my neck, letting my arms and legs hang
without any tension. I remember what Tom Bunn,
a fear of flying expert, told me last week.
Tom:
Most people are very visual. They make pictures
in their mind and the pictures are so vivid
it gets them in trouble. Get yourself a dozen
magazines with big splashy ads. They are intended
to impact you. You might even want to bring
a Walkman with some tapes, but visually . .
. if you can block the visual imagination you
can stay out of trouble, and you can do that
by giving yourself some real to look at.
Michelle:
Check. Since my goal is distraction I've indulged
in the guilty pleasure of People Magazine. It
probably wasn't too smart getting the John Denver
edition, but this one does have funny pictures
of JFK junior. That should keep me occupied
for a while. Well, I can't believe this. We're
actually coming in for a landing. I think I'm
going to survive. Oh, God. It just occurred
to me . . . I'm going to have do this again
on Sunday. Here we go. We're down. Thank you.
The ground. How I love the ground.
Robert:
That was the most turbulent flight to San Francisco
I've ever been on by far. That was more turbulence
and it was bumpier on takeoff and landing than
I've ever seen.
Michelle:
T