You have not flown in a while. Maybe months. Maybe years. Maybe decades. Or maybe you still fly, but every flight is an ordeal. Either way, you are here. Reading this. Which means some part of you has not given up.
The Stages of Fear
Stage one: Denial. "I do not really have a problem. I just prefer not to fly." The person arranges their entire life around avoidance without acknowledging it is fear-driven.
Stage two: Acknowledgment. The fear costs them something significant — a dream vacation, a promotion, a family event. They admit: I am afraid of flying, and it is affecting my life.
Stage three: Research and Seeking. They start looking for solutions. This stage can become its own form of avoidance — endlessly researching without ever taking action.
Stage four: Active Engagement. They commit to a course of action. This is where the real work begins, and where it gets uncomfortable.
Stage five: The First Flight Back. The moment of truth. All the work comes down to this.
Stage six: Integration. The person begins to build a new relationship with flying. Not a fearless relationship. But a different one.
The Avoidance Architecture
When you avoid flying, you begin making decisions based on the fear rather than on what you actually want. Over time, the avoidance becomes part of your identity. "I am someone who does not fly." And this identity becomes self-reinforcing.
Most people with fear of flying carry shame. They feel embarrassed. They compare themselves to others who fly casually. This shame is corrosive. It erodes self-esteem.
And the avoidance compounds over time. The longer you avoid, the bigger the fear grows. The neural pathways of avoidance become deeper, more entrenched, more automatic.
The Tools That Build the Bridge
- Aviation education — understanding what keeps the airplane in the air
- Nervous system regulation — breathing, grounding, vagal toning exercises
- Body-based processing — EMDR, Somatic Experiencing, Brainspotting
- Graduated exposure — airport visits, short flights, building up gradually
- Community — connecting with other fearful fliers, knowing you are not alone
What the Other Side Looks Like
You do not become someone who loves flying. What you become is someone for whom flying is manageable. Normal. A means of transportation. You book flights without a pit in your stomach. You board the airplane and sit down and maybe feel a little nervousness, and then you put on your headphones and watch a movie and arrive at your destination.
You take your children to Disneyland. You visit aging parents. You go on honeymoons. You accept job opportunities. You say yes to things you spent years saying no to.
That is what the other side looks like. Not perfection. Freedom.
You do not have to do it alone. And you do not have to do it all at once. You just have to begin.




