There is a deep fear that the plane is reluctant to fly. You might feel like it is a heavy metal object that gravity is constantly trying to drag down to the earth. You feel that if the engines stop or the pilot looks away then the plane will drop like a stone. It mirrors your own internal feelings of struggling to stay afloat or fears of "failing to launch" in life.
Physics tells a different story. The plane loves to fly. It wants to stay up. Flight depends on three things: air, wings, and speed. When a plane moves fast the air behaves differently. It becomes thick and resistant. It acts like honey or heavy syrup. The wings cut through this thick air and create a massive cushion of high pressure underneath.
At cruising speed this cushion provides nine times more lift than is actually needed to hold the weight of the plane. Imagine a fly trapped in a jar of honey. You can shake that jar but the fly does not fall to the bottom. The medium it is in is too thick. That is your plane at cruising altitude.
Even if the engines quit the plane does not fall. It becomes a glider. It trades altitude for speed. As the nose lowers slightly gravity pulls the plane forward and keeps the air flowing over the wings. A jetliner can glide for 25 to 30 minutes from cruising altitude without any engine power at all.
The plane is naturally stable. If you push the nose down it wants to come back up. If you bank it it wants to level out. The machine is on your team. It is built to succeed.





