Episode 322 of the pilot to Pilot podcast takes off now.
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Tom HeidemaSporty.Com sxmoffer I'm Tom Haidema, pilot for American Airlines.
Tom HeidemaI am A Chicago based 787 captain and author of the book Flying and Dying AV Nation.
HostWelcome back to today's podcast.
HostToday's podcast is an interesting one because it is with the person who gave me my CJO at the airline.
HostSo I don't really know how this kind of worked out.
HostI was just searching Instagram one day and his name popped up and I was like, oh my gosh, this guy's an influencer.
HostHe has 80,000 followers and I have 40.
HostSo I was kind of like blown away by that.
HostBut he came to my feed again, say six months later as we're sitting, maybe even a year later because he released a book.
HostThe book is called Flying and Dying.
HostYou can get on Amazon, Amazon, you can follow his page.
HostI'll link everything below.
HostThis is Tom and Tom writes about how he died for 20 minutes.
HostHe had cardiac arrest.
HostHe was dead, brought back to life by an aed.
HostIt's a fascinating story and you can read it in the book, you can listen to the podcast, but I highly recommend you go to Flying and Dying.
HostThis conversation we had was phenomenal.
HostIf you are interested in applying to the airlines in general, American Airlines, we.
HostWe have some really helpful hints on how to prepare, how to come into the interview, and what you should kind of prepare for.
HostI think it's going to be beneficial for everyone, like I said, no matter what airline you want to go to, because a lot of these techniques, a lot of what the airlines are looking for are kind of similar.
HostEvery airline kind of has a little bit different of what they want.
HostBut Tom has helped hire a lot of people at the airlines, and he's very passionate about it.
HostSo when he talks, you should definitely listen.
HostIt's a great podcast, and I'm really excited to share this.
HostSo go buy the book Flying and Dying.
HostI have it right here.
HostI'm hoping to read it.
HostI just got caught on a trip, like, five seconds ago.
HostSo Mexico City tomorrow, here we come.
HostI'll have time to read it, but AV Nation, I hope you enjoy this episode.
HostAnd without any further ado, here's Tom Heidam.
HostHey, Tom.
HostWelcome to the Pilot.
HostThe Pilot podcast.
Tom HeidemaThank you for having me.
HostYeah, I'm happy to have you on.
HostYou know, it's funny.
HostI messaged you.
HostI actually found your account.
HostLike, I think I was in the middle of my SIM training.
HostI was like, oh, that is the guy that gave me my CJO at American.
HostAnd I.
HostI think someone I was sitting with was like, oh, he has an Instagram page.
HostI looked him up.
HostIt's like, no way.
HostHe's got more followers than me.
HostI was like, that's crazy.
HostSo that really kind of blew me away.
HostAnd I watched some of your stuff, and of course, showing off the 787.
HostI mean, it doesn't get any better than that.
HostSo just watching those videos and seeing all that and then later finding out your story and your book, it's just crazy.
HostAnd I'm looking forward to having you on, and I think you'll have a great story to tell and it'll be a lot of fun.
Tom HeidemaYeah, yeah.
Tom HeidemaI'm looking forward to people learning about it, and hopefully it'll be of benefit to people also to know what happened to me and my past and where I'm going with it.
HostAbsolutely.
HostWell, we're going to start kind of at the beginning.
HostI always ask everyone the first question.
HostIt's always the same.
HostWhy aviation?
HostWhat was it about flying.
HostAviation that got you interested?
Tom HeidemaWell, flying saved me the first.
Tom HeidemaI remember moving to this country when I was about 4 years old and getting on an airplane for the first time, thinking it was absolutely amazing.
Tom HeidemaIt imprinted me from that time on.
Tom HeidemaAnd when I was 14 years old, I took an intro flight at a local airport, Campbell Airport in Pittsburgh.
Tom HeidemaIt's no longer there, but an intro flight back then, you get about 20, 25 minutes, and it was all of $5.
Tom HeidemaAnd I can remember, yeah, it's a different day.
Tom HeidemaAnd I remember just being absolutely amazed by it.
Tom HeidemaNow.
Tom HeidemaI'm six foot five now.
Tom HeidemaWhen I took that intro ride, I needed pillows to see over the dash.
Tom HeidemaSo I've grown a little bit since.
Tom HeidemaAnd I just remember that in high school or even elementary, middle school, I was never really interested in studying or learning anything.
Tom HeidemaBut when it came to airplanes, it was different.
Tom HeidemaIt was just a horse of a different color.
Tom HeidemaAnd all I wanted to do was absorb knowledge and learn about flying.
Tom HeidemaSo I started taking lessons at about 14.
Tom HeidemaIt was super cheap back then.
Tom HeidemaI worked in a TV and appliance store.
HostOh, cool.
Tom HeidemaAnd every couple weeks, I have a couple bucks together for a flying lesson.
Tom HeidemaThat's what I spent it on.
HostThat's incredible.
HostYeah.
HostI saw the back of your book.
HostIt said, from a 150 to a 787.
HostI was thinking back, I was like, this guy's pretty tall.
HostHe's taller than me.
HostIt's like 150.
HostMust not have been too comfortable for him.
HostBut if it was the intro for Fight, you had pillows to see over probably worked out pretty well.
Tom HeidemaYeah, I filled out a little bit since then, too, and quite fit in a 150 anymore.
Tom HeidemaIf I didn't even get off the ground with me in it.
HostProbably not.
Tom HeidemaIt was.
Tom HeidemaIt was the first one.
Tom HeidemaIt was to me that was anything.
Tom HeidemaEven the smell of an airplane had this certain familiarity to it that was just very endearing.
HostYeah.
HostAnd I really kind of relate to what you said about school just not really clicking.
HostUh, I was never a big school fan.
HostI played sports, so that got me into college and.
HostAnd I was a bad student by any means, but just nothing really was of interest to me until I took my first flight lesson.
HostI was like, oh, wow.
HostI.
HostMaybe I just didn't like.
HostLike, I'm not.
HostSchool's not hard for me.
HostI just didn't like what I was learning, if that makes sense.
Tom HeidemaRight.
HostI think that happens for.
HostFor more people than what people think.
HostBecause a lot of people look up, see, pilots are like, oh, they gotta be super smart.
HostIt's like, well, I mean, you do have to Be somewhat smart, but we both know a lot of pilots that aren't the brightest people in the world, and they get it done.
HostSo who's to say you can't do it?
HostRight?
HostBut goes to show that when you find something you're passionate about, you can really kind of make it your craft and try to be the best pie that you can and always learn.
Tom HeidemaI agree.
HostYeah.
Tom HeidemaYeah, you kind of.
Tom HeidemaAnd I see some of these posts where people, like, look at all these books, all this stuff I have to learn, and there's meteorology there, and there's aerodynamics and all these other things, but you kind of enjoy it because that's all a part of becoming a better pilot, is learning all those subjects.
Tom HeidemaAnd though it may seem daunting at first, you just take it.
Tom HeidemaAs they say, the journey of a thousand miles starts with a single step, and you start turning pages.
Tom HeidemaAnd some of it's a little drier than others, but for the most part, you kind of use a lot of it.
Tom HeidemaAnd it's something that you build upon at each of those pages as you turn it.
Tom HeidemaYou're becoming more educated in being a successful aviator.
HostYep.
HostPerfectly said.
HostIt's like building a house.
HostYou go brick by brick, right?
HostYou get the foundation, and then you keep going on, and you learn kind of the arithmetic, and you go into calculus or whatever the equation would be for that, into aviation.
HostSo you started taking flight lessons at 14.
HostWere your parents.
HostWere they into aviation at all?
HostWere they kind of like, you want to be a pilot?
HostThis is kind of strange.
HostLike, talk a little bit about the relationship with flying and family and support that you had.
Tom HeidemaYeah, well, they saw that I liked it.
Tom HeidemaI was a troublemaker as a kid, and not to show my hand in the book, but my mom at one point said, I just hope you're not in jail someday, and that you have a job.
Tom HeidemaBut then she saw my passion for airplanes, and that would be my direction.
Tom HeidemaAnd I was fortunate that flying isn't for everybody.
Tom HeidemaI learned that as a flight instructor or even sometimes it's a.
Tom HeidemaA medical reason.
Tom HeidemaI notice pilots are people who tend to have a lot of situational awareness.
Tom HeidemaI can tell sometimes by how somebody drives a car, how good a pilot they're going to be because they seem to take things in and they're able to naturally figure out what the most important parts of what they're taking in are and have kind of a 360 view.
Tom HeidemaAnd when people do that in a car, they tend to be good pilots, too.
Tom HeidemaGood drivers.
Tom HeidemaAre good pilots typically not.
Tom HeidemaNot exclusively.
Tom HeidemaBut for the most part, when it came to circle background of my parents, they were a little skeptical because I really had never hung on to anything.
Tom HeidemaBut this was the one thing that I truly continued with that I didn't want to give up on because I knew it was the only thing that I really, really wanted to do.
Tom HeidemaAnd anything other than that would not have made me feel like I'd fulfilled my own dreams.
HostSo at 14, getting those pilot license or getting the pilot, you obviously have to go to school.
HostYou got to complete school.
HostWere you kind of motivated for this dream?
HostDid this kind of kickstart you doing better in school at all?
HostOr is it still pretty hard for you to focus in school when all you're really thinking about was was flying?
Tom HeidemaNot really.
Tom HeidemaI was on the basketball team.
Tom HeidemaI was chasing.
Tom HeidemaI'd love to say that it motivated, but it didn't.
Tom HeidemaBack then you didn't need much of a GPA to get into college.
Tom HeidemaYeah, thank God for that.
Tom HeidemaI got to Embry Riddle and at that point things did turn because now I'm pursuing aeronautical science.
Tom HeidemaI'm pursuing something I love.
Tom HeidemaAnd yeah, my, my GPA went way up.
Tom HeidemaI had almost a 4.0there because there are obviously there's subjects you don't like there.
Tom HeidemaBut now I'm in an environment with other people who want to learn how to fly.
Tom HeidemaAnd you kind of motivate each other too.
Tom HeidemaYou tend to build on each other's inspiration.
Tom HeidemaAnd that I think helped me a lot to where I said, okay, I got to get serious about this.
Tom HeidemaAnd I did.
HostWhat was it about Embry Riddle that kind of drove you that direction?
HostJust the biggest aviation school you could find.
HostAnd I want to surround myself with other like minded people.
HostOr did you have some other flight schools that you're looking at other universities?
Tom HeidemaWell, I took academics at Embry Riddle and then I flew at north there in Prescott, Arizona.
HostOkay.
Tom HeidemaI went to Emory Riddle because back then there weren't many schools that had aviation focus and I wanted to kind of get away.
Tom HeidemaI grew up in Pittsburgh and I wanted to go somewhere kind of far away and do things on my own.
Tom HeidemaSo I went to the area, the campus out there in Arizona.
Tom HeidemaAnd I guess at the time I didn't really consider there may have been other programs in other places.
Tom HeidemaArizona just sounded really cool to me and it gave me enough distance from my hometown to where I knew I had to stand on my own two feet.
HostThere's something about that.
HostI grew up in North Carolina.
HostI decided to go to Ohio State.
HostI actually played football at Ohio State.
HostAnd it was one of the best decisions I ever made was leaving my hometown, getting out of everything that was comfortable and kind of figuring out how to do life on my own.
HostRight.
HostYou have nothing to rely on.
HostYou have little friends.
HostYou got to kind of figure out who you are and what you like and enjoy on your own.
HostAnd I think it was one of the best experiences I ever had.
HostNow, it's not to say it's not hard, right.
HostAnd it's kind of scary when you think about it, especially if all you know is Pittsburgh or Charlotte or wherever you.
HostYou're coming from.
HostBut I think it's definitely something that is.
HostI'll probably won't tell my kid that.
HostI'm gonna tell my kid he needs to stay close, he needs to stay local, you know.
HostBut yeah, as someone who's listening to this, definitely go, Go far away if you can.
HostYou learn a lot.
Tom HeidemaYeah.
Tom HeidemaYeah.
Tom HeidemaMy kids are a little too far away now.
Tom HeidemaThey went to school in State.
Tom HeidemaHere I'm living.
Tom HeidemaI live in southwest Michigan and now they're kind of all gone.
Tom HeidemaSo I'm kind of hoping they're.
Tom HeidemaThey'll come back at some point.
Tom HeidemaI don't think they will.
HostWhat part of Michigan do you live in?
Tom HeidemaKalamazoo, just south of Kalamazoo.
Tom HeidemaPortage.
HostOh, cool.
Tom HeidemaYeah, I love my house here.
Tom HeidemaIt's a great place to raise my kids.
HostYeah, it's a great area.
HostI.
HostI used to fly single pilot freight and we used to go to Holland.
HostSo that's how I was kind of putting together like where all the, all the areas are.
HostSo we went to Holland all the time.
HostWent to Kalamazoo, Grand Rapids, obviously Detroit and Ypsilanti for all the auto.
HostAuto cars and everything.
HostBut yeah, yeah, but yeah, there's.
HostIt's a great place and there's some great breweries up there in that area if people earn a beer, so.
HostCan't go wrong.
Tom HeidemaYeah, there are.
HostYeah.
Tom HeidemaBells is the big one out of here.
Tom HeidemaBut there are a lot of micro breweries to lat 42.
Tom HeidemaThere's a couple of.
Tom HeidemaAnd that new place down the street here called Presidential Brun.
Tom HeidemaBoy, perfect.
Tom HeidemaYeah, we got some good beer there.
HostThey know how to make their beer in Michigan, that's for sure.
HostYou.
HostSo you're in Arizona now.
HostDid you get your private before you went there?
HostDid you have any kind of certificates or did you get everything in Arizona?
Tom HeidemaOkay, yeah, I had a private and I actually Got a multi engine rating when I was a senior.
HostOh, really?
Tom HeidemaThat's money.
Tom HeidemaAnd I had a choice either to go to the prom or get a multi engine rating.
Tom HeidemaAnd there was a flight school that had.
Tom HeidemaThey had this brand new Beechcraft Duchess.
Tom HeidemaAnd I just not.
Tom HeidemaI mean, I know pilots are kind of nerds, but I really wanted to get my hands on that airplane more than anything else in the world.
Tom HeidemaAnd it's kind of probably weird to admit that now, but I don't regret it.
Tom HeidemaThere were.
Tom HeidemaThere are plenty of time that.
Tom HeidemaThere's plenty of time to do other things too.
Tom HeidemaAnd for me to get that rating.
Tom HeidemaThe woman who taught me that the Mei was actually a teacher in my high school.
HostOh, no way.
Tom HeidemaRobert Rosny.
Tom HeidemaYeah.
Tom HeidemaAnd I don't know if she flies anymore.
Tom HeidemaI haven't been in touch with her in 30 or 40 years.
Tom HeidemaBut she kind of gave me a bit of a push.
Tom HeidemaShe made me more of a perfectionist.
Tom HeidemaI remember I would talk to her and she said, don't ever be 50 foot high or 50ft low and settle for it.
Tom HeidemaBe right on your altitude.
Tom HeidemaAnd she gave me tools to be meticulous that I.
Tom HeidemaThat I've carried throughout the last 45 years of flying now.
HostYeah, I think it's really cool.
HostFor me, it was when I was doing my commercial, my.
HostThat's when my instructor finally, he's like, you are a professional pilot.
HostYou are expected to perform at professional standards, and you shouldn't be happy with anything other than those standards.
HostAnd that has stuck with me ever since.
HostYou know, it's like you said, you're 50ft high.
HostYou're like, you're shooting yourself.
HostYou're like, oh, my gosh, that was awful.
HostIt might be a smooth landing, but you know that you were either unstable, a little too fast, you could have done something better to make it perfect.
Tom HeidemaYeah, yeah.
Tom HeidemaIt's funny, you talk about stable, you know, nice landing.
Tom HeidemaThat's something.
Tom HeidemaThe pastor, oh, he made the nicest landing.
Tom HeidemaYeah, but he made it 4, 000ft down the Runway too.
HostThat's my favorite.
HostYeah, that's my favorite when I flew at my last company.
HostYeah, they're like floating down, way down.
HostThey're like, oh, that was so nice.
HostI'm like, yeah, but you're supposed to land back there.
HostIt's like, we probably should have gone around, man.
HostWhat were you doing?
Tom HeidemaYeah, I'm with you.
HostYeah.
HostOh, it's pretty funny.
HostUm, but yeah, so you're in Arizona now.
HostYou're at Embry Riddle, you're flying.
HostSeparate from Embry Riddle, which I've heard a lot of people do.
HostCause Embry Riddle is not the cheapest school in the world.
HostSo if you can find any discount to in flying, you go for it.
HostUm, you get your training in Embry Riddle.
HostYou get your training at a 61 school, you can still get to American Delta United.
HostThey're not going to care where you went, just as long as you have a good record and you have your training.
HostSo.
Tom HeidemaYeah, yeah, yeah.
Tom HeidemaAnd I was able to get a lot more quickly, too.
Tom HeidemaBy my second year there, I had cfi and now I was teaching students while I was in school.
Tom HeidemaAnd I had a good deal, too.
Tom HeidemaI was the assistant athletic director, so that gave me free room and board plus a salary.
Tom HeidemaSo I had a good deal at Embry Riddle.
Tom HeidemaAnd I was doing stuff I love, too.
Tom HeidemaI really enjoyed all the athleticism and being able to be in a school where I could do athletics as well as fly.
HostYeah.
HostDid you ever think, you know, like 14 year old self even looking at your mom and dad, kind of what you said about your mom was like, man, I just hope you're not in jail.
HostWas there ever a time when you became an instructor and your mom's like, holy crap, you're like doing this right now.
HostYou're teaching other people and.
HostNever thought my kid would be doing that.
Tom HeidemaShe.
Tom HeidemaWell, it came a little earlier than that.
Tom HeidemaI think once, once I showed a commitment, got my private pilot's license that really showed that I could complete a task.
Tom HeidemaShe was very impressed the day that I soloed.
Tom HeidemaAnd I remember her thinking, okay, things kind of turned to where she now had a new confidence in me because she saw my passion for something.
Tom HeidemaAnd some of us are late bloomers.
Tom HeidemaThere are a lot of people who kind of start on the wrong foot and then one day they decide.
Tom HeidemaAnd even in aviation, I'm involved with the American Airlines pilot interview standards team, and we hire pilots from 23 to 64.
Tom HeidemaAnd some of those.
Tom HeidemaIt's been a lifelong dream, and I love to see somebody even in their later years be able to fulfill that dream.
HostI think it's really cool you say that because I wanted to bring that up at some point today.
HostObviously we talked about how you gave me my cjo.
HostIt was a great experience.
HostExperience.
HostBut in that class of people that we had, even in the class that I had, we had, I think we had like a 24 year old.
HostWe had a 60 year old.
HostSo it goes to show that if you can do this later in life.
HostI get a lot of DMS.
HostI get a lot of people saying, hey, I'm 35.
HostIs it too late?
HostLike you still have 30 years of flying?
HostYeah, it's like you have a whole career ahead of you.
HostLike, get started, go.
HostSo it doesn't matter if you start at 23, obviously it'd be nice if you start at 23.
HostI have a buddy who is a regional captain and the amount of money he told me he's going to make this year on bonuses and regional, I'm just like, that's insane.
HostAnd he's like 24 years old.
HostI was like when I was 24, I was making $15 an hour, building up all my time.
HostIt's like, good for you, dude.
HostThat's amazing.
Tom HeidemaYeah, it's great right now.
Tom HeidemaAnd I kind of like seeing that come up, especially at a regional level.
Tom HeidemaI worked at a commuter airline and back then it didn't pay much.
Tom HeidemaBut a lot of it depends on life situation too.
Tom HeidemaWhen people say, hey, I'm this age and I want to start just a lot of it has my answer to whether or not they should do it has a lot to do with their life, family or their life situation.
Tom HeidemaIf they have an infant, a 2 and a 4 year old, it's like, okay, that's where your priority should lie.
Tom HeidemaBecause there is a sacrifice in learning how to fly and having a deal of lower seniority and not having a very advantageous schedule now the schedules and the job have changed now to where you can not only get move up a little more quickly, but to where, for instance, in America now there's holiday pay.
Tom HeidemaSo I always had to work Christmas.
Tom HeidemaWell, now they jump at those trips because they're a premium pay trip.
Tom HeidemaSo you're able to, once you gain seniority, have a little bit more manipulation over schedule if you do have family commitments.
HostYeah, I was surprised that I had Thanksgiving off.
HostI was like, that's pretty nice.
HostI like this.
HostI could get used to this.
HostSo I was very excited about that.
HostWe'll find out about Christmas in a couple of days.
HostBut very excited about Thanksgiving.
HostWhen you were going through training in every riddle, was there anything that you struggled with whether being away from home?
HostI know you said that it was great that you were not that way, but a lot of times it can be.
HostSometimes can be difficult when you're just so new somewhere or flying itself was instrument, private, commercial.
HostIs there anything that you struggled with out in Arizona flying wise or personally?
Tom HeidemaI wouldn't say flying wise, that went.
Tom HeidemaThat went well.
Tom HeidemaLuckily, there was stuff that I could lock onto now, the flight ability stuff.
Tom HeidemaI felt like I learned that quickly.
Tom HeidemaSome of the.
Tom HeidemaI think when you go to an instrument rating that it just becomes another whole new chapter of learning how to fly and to incorporate your base knowledge and then do that.
Tom HeidemaI think that's a big chapter and there's a lot of detail in that.
Tom HeidemaI think more it was personally, you have those nights when you're just all by yourself and you wish you could talk to your mom or your dad or your brother or whoever.
Tom HeidemaAnd it was 1981 when I was there.
Tom HeidemaSo you couldn't just pick up a cell phone and do a FaceTime call.
Tom HeidemaIt was long distance and it was expensive.
Tom HeidemaAnd if you made a long distance call, you were looking at what it cost per minute.
Tom HeidemaAnd you can only have so many of those nights where you want to pick up the phone and lean on somebody that you know or that you can trust.
Tom HeidemaAnd there were times I can remember where I thought, okay, I'm kind of out here by myself.
Tom HeidemaThese are all new people.
Tom HeidemaBut it made me more comfortable with my own independence.
Tom HeidemaAnd once you get through those kind of those couple of lonely times, you find a good friend group.
Tom HeidemaYou find people who are kind of like minded.
Tom HeidemaAnd then you end up, you're doing so much stuff at that point to where you're involving with those people or those subjects or those activities to where you kind of turn the page on the things that bother you or maybe cause you to be a little bit more.
Tom HeidemaFeel a little bit more alone.
HostYeah.
HostAnd keeping yourself busy, which I'm sure you saw too.
HostIt's like distracting your mind getting involved.
HostLike you said, athletic director or athletics or clubs.
HostThere's a lot you can do when you go to college.
HostYou just got to look for it.
HostThe opportunities are out there.
HostThe opportunity is to sit at home and not do anything.
HostBut there's also opportunities to get involved and meet people.
HostAnd sometimes it's just up to you to put yourself out there, which is scary and can be hard.
Tom HeidemaYeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Tom HeidemaIt reminds me of a story I probably shouldn't share, but I will.
HostI love it.
Tom HeidemaI had the keys to everything as the assistant athletic director.
Tom HeidemaAnd we'd go out and we'd be, we would.
Tom HeidemaWe'd be slightly altered and I'd be like, hey, let's go shoot basketball.
Tom HeidemaAnd I'd open up, we'd be playing ball, there'd be beers in there and security show Up.
Tom HeidemaAnd I'd be like, hey, that's Tom.
Tom HeidemaAll right, go ahead.
Tom HeidemaJust lock up when you're done.
Tom HeidemaBut, yeah, that.
Tom HeidemaThat little extra privilege, it opened a few doors, but we had some fun with it, too.
HostYeah.
HostAs you should.
HostIt's always good to have a bit of fun.
HostA little safe fun, right?
HostYou weren't hurting anyone?
Tom HeidemaYeah, no, no.
Tom HeidemaJust as long as the basketball didn't hit your beer bottle.
Tom HeidemaEverything was.
HostEverything was good.
HostBeing out there, being a cfi, what was the goal?
HostI guess, as young Tom as a pilot, was it American Airlines?
HostWas it just flying for fun, figuring out as you go, kind of.
HostWhat were your goals for your professional career at an early age?
Tom HeidemaWell, the most important thing in all of this is to enjoy every step of the way.
Tom HeidemaI.
Tom HeidemaOf course, you want to look forward to the future, but you never want to miss out on what you're doing right now.
Tom HeidemaAnd I talk about it in the books, actually.
Tom HeidemaChapter two, where I worked for a flight school in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, Allegheny County Airport, places called Metro Air.
Tom HeidemaAnd we were a dime a dozen at the time.
Tom HeidemaAnd they did everything they could to get us to go find students.
Tom HeidemaAnd we would fly for sometimes a week or two at a time, hoping a student would walk in the door.
Tom HeidemaAnd I always wanted that part of my career, as well as all the other parts of my career to mean something.
Tom HeidemaI wanted to look back at my CFI days.
Tom HeidemaIt's not, oh, I can't wait to go to the next step.
Tom HeidemaBut how did I teach?
Tom HeidemaWhat did I do?
Tom HeidemaHow did I empower others?
Tom HeidemaSo I ran into a guy.
HostAt.
Tom HeidemaThe Allegheny County Airport.
Tom HeidemaI saw him every day.
Tom HeidemaHe would roll.
Tom HeidemaHe was a paraplegic.
Tom HeidemaAnd he would go to the airport almost every day, and he would just watch airplanes.
Tom HeidemaOne day, I just walked up to him, hey, how you doing?
Tom HeidemaWe started talking, and it turned out he had gone.
Tom HeidemaHe was registered at Embry Ribble.
Tom HeidemaHe went home to get his stuff and got into a motorcycle accident and broke his back.
Tom HeidemaAnd he'd been in a wheelchair ever since.
Tom HeidemaAnd I said, man, there's gotta be a way to get you in an airplane.
Tom HeidemaHe was a super cool guy.
Tom HeidemaJust.
Tom HeidemaI just vibed with this guy right away, and we got a hand control and we installed that thing.
Tom HeidemaAnd everybody at that airport embraced him, learning how to fly.
Tom HeidemaAnd it's because he didn't have much money.
Tom HeidemaThe owner of the flight school let him fly for gas.
Tom HeidemaAnd this guy ended up with a commercial instrument license.
Tom HeidemaAnd we taught.
Tom HeidemaOh, yeah.
Tom HeidemaRoss Wilson Roscoe, he was.
Tom HeidemaGuy was a God.
Tom HeidemaHe was so fun to hang around with.
Tom HeidemaHis perspective of the world still resides with me today.
Tom HeidemaBut we ended up putting together a program called the Pennsylvania Wheelchair Pilots.
Tom HeidemaAnd I taught more pilots with disabilities than I did ambulatory pilots.
Tom HeidemaAnd it was my way of.
Tom HeidemaOkay.
Tom HeidemaInstructing meant something.
Tom HeidemaWe put together a program, and it just kind of fell into my lap because I had an open mind to it.
Tom HeidemaAnd it started literally with me walking up to the fence and talking to a guy that I saw every day at the airport as he watched airplanes.
Tom HeidemaA big corporate field Allegheny county was at the time.
Tom HeidemaAnd it opened the door to this amazing program.
Tom HeidemaAnd I've always looked at it that way.
Tom HeidemaEvery plane I've ever flown, I've really tried to enjoy learning it.
Tom HeidemaAn American I've got.
Tom HeidemaWell, we've got a total of 10 type ratings now, nine of them in American.
Tom HeidemaAnd a lot of that was just, I can hold airplane and I'm going to go learn it.
Tom HeidemaAnd these check airmen with these check pilots, look at me go, dude, you're just a glutton for punishment.
Tom HeidemaI'm like, no, how cool is airplane is.
Tom HeidemaI want to learn it.
HostThat's awesome.
Tom HeidemaAnd by taking that attitude, I ended up with a lot of.
Tom HeidemaThose are my merit badges.
Tom HeidemaI got to fly all these cool airplanes and look back at them.
Tom HeidemaAnd that's why I think every part of it, whether it's flying an airplane you don't necessarily care for, you can find good parts of it, and you can find things that.
Tom HeidemaWhere you can build and look back at it in a very positive manner.
HostDo you know if that program is still going on out there?
HostHave you kept in touch with that at all?
Tom HeidemaNo.
Tom HeidemaHe passed a couple of years ago.
Tom HeidemaThe.
Tom HeidemaWhen I left, it's not that it fell apart, but there were other.
Tom HeidemaSo there have been other instructors in other places.
Tom HeidemaAnd that hand control, I think, is a matter of fact.
Tom HeidemaI'm sure it's still available.
Tom HeidemaBut the glue of it kind of came apart.
Tom HeidemaNot that people lost interest, but I don't think it really maintained the force that it had or the propulsion, because once Ross had his commercial license, he was out doing other things, too.
Tom HeidemaDidn't really want to commit to the flight school.
HostRight.
Tom HeidemaAnd he.
Tom HeidemaFor him, he just wanted to get in an airplane and go fly it somewhere new.
Tom HeidemaOr he.
Tom HeidemaHe really.
Tom HeidemaHe became quite.
Tom HeidemaQuite the pilot, and he went all over the place.
Tom HeidemaFlying.
HostThat's so cool.
HostThat's a great story.
HostAnd I really love what you Say you don't have to do it on that level.
HostRight.
HostIt's as little as just personally just enjoying the moment because I remember there was this one time I was.
HostI was Pre flighting my 172 or my pre flighting my arrow, and I was super excited to be flying an arrow that had 200 horsepower.
HostI was looking at the 172, a new student going in there.
HostI was like, he's probably wishing he was where I was.
HostAnd then I'm here wishing watching a Challenger take off that I wasn't there.
HostAnd it kind of hit me.
HostI was like, I need to enjoy where I am right now.
HostEnjoy this arrow.
HostBecause there's going to come a point in time where I'm probably never going to fly small planes ever again because it's, it's expensive to get into.
HostYou just find yourself getting busy.
HostYou have a family.
HostYou don't get back into it.
Host90% of pilots probably don't fly small airplanes ever again.
HostUm, so enjoy it while you got it because the chances are when you're done with the 172, you're not going back in a 1 72.
HostSame thing with an Arrow.
HostSame thing with a King Air especially.
HostI mean, I don't know many people who can afford a King Air.
HostRight.
HostSo the chances of you flying those planes or a Duchess aren't going to be very good.
Tom HeidemaYeah, it's true.
Tom HeidemaThat's why I have fun with it.
HostAbsolutely.
HostJust enjoy the process.
HostIt's a grind, right?
HostI mean, you definitely have to grind for it.
HostSome days are harder than others, but try to go to the airport with a smile on your face.
HostIt'll help you out.
HostAnd honestly, people notice that too.
HostPeople can pick up on just happy people or people that love what they're doing, and it's contagious.
HostAnd it can really mean the difference between either getting a job or be like, hey, my buddy is actually looking for a pilot to sit right seat.
HostI've noticed your attitude.
HostI've noticed how hard you're working.
HostWould you like to do this?
HostSo just going to the airport with a smile on your face can help you out a lot.
Tom HeidemaYeah.
Tom HeidemaYeah.
Tom HeidemaAnd what I've also noticed is the people who always kind of look for that next step when they get there.
Tom HeidemaNot every, not every airline pilot's happy.
Tom HeidemaThey're an airline pilot.
Tom HeidemaAnd when you, and I don't say condition yourself, but when you show that gratitude or that appreciation to fly all those airplanes when you get to an Airline.
Tom HeidemaThe newness for me, I know you have your days, but I don't want.
Tom HeidemaThere's a part of it that never wore out.
Tom HeidemaThat wore off.
Tom HeidemaAnd this month I go into my 39th year at American, and I'll tell you what, I still love putting on my uniform.
Tom HeidemaI'm not flying right now.
Tom HeidemaI'm medically out for a bit here.
Tom HeidemaBut I still, you know, when I.
Tom HeidemaEven when I'm wearing my uniform to do interviews or cjos or administrative work, I just really have such a love for that and being around the people who do it.
Tom HeidemaAnother thing to parlay off of that is that positivity, it can be contagious.
Tom HeidemaI was at the mall here in Kalamazoo years ago, and I walked by this hot tub store and I just kind of thought it was cool.
Tom HeidemaI walked in and the sales rep started talking to me.
Tom HeidemaThis guy by the name of Dustin, Lucius and Dustin, good guy, I could just tell.
Tom HeidemaBut he's kind of looking for something else to do.
Tom HeidemaAnd we got talking about airplanes and flying and I said, it's the coolest job.
Tom HeidemaI love it.
Tom HeidemaWell, he just got a hold of me not that long ago.
Tom HeidemaHe just got on the Delta.
HostOh, no way.
Tom HeidemaHe took the ball and ran.
HostHey, that's so cool.
Tom HeidemaAnd that was nothing more than a conversation that stemmed from my love for what I do.
Tom HeidemaSo, yeah, I've always been really happy about my career choice, and that includes all the steps along the way to get to where I am today.
HostThere seems to be a barrier from the outside looking in of getting into aviation outside of money, people think they're not smart enough.
HostLike we said earlier, people think they just can't do it.
HostIt's not in their family, they throw the military.
HostBut when you realize it's honestly as simple as just picking up a phone or just driving to an airport, you could more than likely get in a plane same day and go fly and kind of start the process.
HostYou know it.
HostYeah, it's very easy to start it.
HostObviously it's hard to make the money to pay for it.
HostAnd there's other barriers, but, uh, just go do it.
HostJust go call someone, go do a Google search.
HostFlight school is near me.
HostAnd you can make it work.
Tom HeidemaYeah, take.
Tom HeidemaTake an intro ride and if you get air sick, then maybe you want to do something else.
Tom HeidemaBut there are a lot of ways to do that.
Tom HeidemaAnd it's interesting because before you mentioned about Part 61 schools, and a lot of people feel they have to have the discipline of a Certain type of school.
Tom HeidemaWe don't really look at that now with us because we have the cadet academy.
Tom HeidemaThat's something we're very passionate about because we're shaping these pilots from their first hour, and we really like them to do well, and we support that strongly.
Tom HeidemaBut if it's not something that's available to you, as you said, you go to the airport, There are other things and other ways to get to that and still achieve your goal.
Tom HeidemaThere are a lot of different avenues to achieve the end goal.
HostYeah, I mean, I've had.
HostThis is my 324th episode that recorded.
HostAnd I mean, there's a handful of people that have had the same exact path whether.
HostWhether.
HostI mean, everyone kind of has a general story that can kind of jive together, but someone is.
HostIs doing fish spotting and a.
HostIn a champ, like 50 miles off the coast.
HostLike someone.
HostEveryone just has a very unique part of time building or flying or perspective.
HostSo I think it's really cool, just the.
HostThe diversity that comes in your background when you get in aviation, and it leads to cool conversations when you're flying as well.
Tom HeidemaI agree.
Tom HeidemaI agree.
Tom HeidemaWhen you go all the way to Rome or Shanghai or something.
HostGoals.
HostOne day.
HostOne day, you know what, you kind.
Tom HeidemaOf find the flying that works best for you.
HostYeah.
Tom HeidemaThere are folks like that.
Tom HeidemaWe've been covering, I believe the Dallas, Shanghai trip, And that's about 14 hours of change.
Tom HeidemaAnd we take two full crews.
Tom HeidemaThat trip just crushed me.
Tom HeidemaI mean, sometimes you're up over the pole and it just feels like you're never going to land.
Tom HeidemaAnd there are people.
Tom HeidemaIt's three on and, you know, nine off.
Tom HeidemaWhatever it comes out to.
Tom HeidemaIt's a great trip.
HostYeah.
Tom HeidemaBut it just beat me up.
Tom HeidemaWould take me four or five days to recover from that.
Tom HeidemaThere are others who like the kind of the up and down and getting their hands dirty and in and out of airports and that.
Tom HeidemaThat could be their thing.
Tom HeidemaAnd my sweet spot was like a Chicago, Barcelona, something like that.
Tom HeidemaTry not to whistle as I'm packing my bag that way.
Tom HeidemaYeah.
Tom HeidemaLike, I.
Tom HeidemaI know I get home, I'm like, I'm really tired.
Tom HeidemaShe's like, yeah, right.
HostYeah.
HostI'm sure it was tough going to Rome, drinking coffee and eating pasta.
Tom HeidemaRight.
Tom HeidemaYeah.
Tom HeidemaYou kind of find the flying that works for you.
Tom HeidemaAnd obviously that.
Tom HeidemaThat comes with seniority, too.
HostYeah, absolutely.
HostYeah, definitely.
HostWith my reserve status right now, I just pick up whatever's left, but it's all new to me, so I'm kind of just Enjoying it.
HostSo it all works out like we.
HostLike we talked about.
HostJust enjoy the ride, man.
Tom HeidemaYeah.
HostSo you're.
HostYou're leaving cfi, you're starting kind of your career.
HostYeah.
HostYou're getting your next job.
HostWhat came next for you after cfi?
Tom HeidemaAfter.
Tom HeidemaSee, I did that for a little while, and then I was hired by a commuter airline, Pennsylvania Airlines, Allegheny Commuter.
Tom HeidemaThey were out of Harrisburg.
Tom HeidemaAnd I flew a shorts 330.
HostOh, no way.
Tom HeidemaYeah, right.
Tom HeidemaAnd talk about that thing was a boxcar, but it had PT6 engines.
Tom HeidemaAnd that thing would whistle when it started.
Tom HeidemaI'm like, this is so cool.
Tom HeidemaThere are a lot of jokes.
Tom HeidemaAnd I know I keep referencing the book, but I talk about that.
Tom HeidemaThey called it the Sky Pig and the Flying Boxcar and all these other things.
Tom HeidemaBut for me, I was hauling passengers, I was wearing a uniform, and I was like 21 years old.
Tom HeidemaSo it may have been 20 when I started, because I remember thinking, if I'm on a layover, I can't have a beer.
Tom HeidemaI'm not old enough yet.
Tom HeidemaSo working at Pennsylvania Airlines was great.
Tom HeidemaState College, Pennsylvania.
Tom HeidemaAnd it's all hand flying below 10,000ft.
Tom HeidemaAnd after a couple of years, a lot of people really enjoyed that flying who were working at that company.
Tom HeidemaAnd I transitioned to Simmons airlines in late 85, and they had shorts, and I decided to go work there for a little bit.
Tom HeidemaAnd they were checking out captains fast.
Tom HeidemaSo right when I turned 23, I was able to check out as a captain.
Tom HeidemaAnd now I'm just really loving life because Simmons was a fun place to work.
Tom HeidemaIt was kind of a single crowd, so everybody was ready to go enjoy themselves on layovers.
Tom HeidemaThey were younger, and it was unlike the very more domesticated crowd at Pennsylvania Airlines.
Tom HeidemaSimmons was a different story.
Tom HeidemaAnd we'd fly Eagle out of Chicago, but Northwest Airlink out of Detroit.
Tom HeidemaAnd so depending on where you were, you were flying, you're flying.
Tom HeidemaAnd more.
Tom HeidemaIt was a more regional company, too, so it was a lot of fun.
Tom HeidemaIt was a good transition.
HostAnd then after Simmons, where did you go after that?
Tom HeidemaAmerican.
Tom HeidemaPerfect.
HostHow many hours did you have when you got hired by American?
Tom HeidemaI had just north of 3,000.
Tom HeidemaYeah.
Tom HeidemaAnd that was.
Tom HeidemaThat had a combination of pic in the shorts.
Tom HeidemaI didn't have much high altitude time, just a couple hours here and there.
Tom HeidemaBut most of it was a little bit of king air and mu2 stuff.
Tom HeidemaBut my first jet was at American.
Tom HeidemaThat's cool.
Tom HeidemaI was hired there as a flight Engineer on the 727 oh, perfect.
Tom HeidemaThat was kind of a good thing.
HostWas that I said perfect.
Tom HeidemaYeah.
Tom HeidemaWell, that way I could kind of watch the job.
Tom HeidemaAnd it took a year and a half to go right seat.
Tom HeidemaAfter being a flight engineer there and even getting on at American back, that was just post deregulation.
Tom HeidemaSo a lot of companies are going out of business.
Tom HeidemaThere was People Express and Eastern and Pan Am.
Tom HeidemaAnd so the job market was fairly flooded.
Tom HeidemaAnd American, especially back then, they would go through a lot of applicants.
Tom HeidemaThey pretty much called anybody in.
Tom HeidemaAnd even when they called me, I'm like, okay, this isn't, this isn't gonna really.
Tom HeidemaI was too tall.
Tom HeidemaThat was the other thing.
Tom HeidemaYou had to be no taller than six four.
Tom HeidemaAnd I'm six five.
HostOh, really slouched.
Tom HeidemaYeah.
HostLike I'm.
Tom HeidemaYeah.
Tom HeidemaSo where luckily it was three interviews.
Tom HeidemaTwo of them were two days long.
Tom HeidemaIt was intensely physical.
Tom HeidemaThey gave us what was called the astronaut physical.
Tom HeidemaAnd somehow I got through all that and got a job.
Tom HeidemaJust after my 24th birthday, I started American and it was, I was just so happy to think that I'd made this many steps and luckily a fairly short time.
HostLet's take a break from today's episode to hear from our sponsor, RAA Justin here.
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HostVisit RAA.com Pilotopilot that's RAA.com Pilotopilot and now back to today's episode.
HostAs someone who is very involved in the hiring process right now, to look back on what you had to go through, what do you compare?
HostDo you wish it was more like it was right now?
HostJust the differences in time and the astronaut physical.
HostThe two days of interviews, probably extremely technical as well.
HostTalk a little bit about the differences and just maybe why it's different.
Tom HeidemaWell, let me think on that physically.
Tom HeidemaSo let's take the physical aspect of it.
Tom HeidemaYou need a first class physical.
Tom HeidemaI'm still a big proponent, a big advocate of health and fitness.
Tom HeidemaSo you are responsible for your own fitness.
Tom HeidemaAnd it's a good idea in the first place to create those foundations of fitness, health and fitness earlier on in life at American they don't do that anymore.
Tom HeidemaFirst class medical is all you need.
Tom HeidemaBut it's a really good idea to be healthy anyway.
Tom HeidemaAnd obviously we can follow, fall off the wagon a little bit.
Tom HeidemaYou don't have to have an extreme discipline in that, but taking care of yourself.
Tom HeidemaYou just feel better and you think better.
Tom HeidemaAnd it's a good thing to create foundationally.
Tom HeidemaTechnically, I came from six pack and we learned to scan, we hand flew, we didn't have autopilots.
Tom HeidemaAnd even flying the Dreamliner, what I've always noticed is I love hand flying that airplane.
Tom HeidemaTo have good skills, it's a great idea not to just push buttons too much.
Tom HeidemaNow obviously if you're fatigued or there are other reasons that you want to use automation, great.
Tom HeidemaBut we had no automation back then, so we couldn't use it.
Tom HeidemaAnd I think that also creates great foundations.
Tom HeidemaSo to those who are learning to fly, even if you have automation available, learn the automation, but also learn not to have automation because it makes you a better pilot.
Tom HeidemaAnd where I'll fly with somebody who it's V1 rotate, gear up, autopilot like okay, and that's.
Tom HeidemaAnd they'll click it off at a thousand feet coming in and crush the landing like, dude, fly the airplane a little bit.
Tom HeidemaI hand fly up to almost 20,000ft and before I turn the autopilot on and then it's begrudgingly because I'm like, oh man, this is cool flying this thing.
Tom HeidemaAnd then depending on, I would say fatigue level, when you're flying Europe or somewhere far in the airplane, it's a good idea to use that automation because it's safety related.
Tom HeidemaBut if you're feeling fresh and you're just doing a couple of domestic legs in the airplane, fly that thing.
Tom HeidemaAnd if you get to the point to where other things are making it more difficult, for instance, if you're in a high and a saturated air traffic environment, obviously use automation.
Tom HeidemaI'm not trying to discourage that because automation has created a lot of safety, but when you're able to to reduce that automation, it's a great idea to do it and just keep your hands on the airplane.
Tom HeidemaSo comparatively, we had no choice back then.
Tom HeidemaNow automation is available.
Tom HeidemaBut it's a good idea to today choose to take away that automation when possible.
HostYeah, I mean there's that famous American Airlines kind of training video.
HostI think it's going around, it's been around on YouTube where I can't remember who it is, but he's sitting in front of like A recurrent problem.
HostHe's like, hey, when things go wrong, sometimes it's best to knock off that automation and just focus on fly the airplane.
HostRight.
HostUh, so same thing.
HostYeah, yeah.
HostYou're a pilot.
HostYou can fly an airplane.
HostThese are still airplanes, right?
HostAnd I'm sure people be.
HostIt's amazed at how.
HostHow these airplanes operate, how they fly.
HostIt's like they fly well, right.
HostIt's not like you're flying a tank.
HostSo it's probably fun to fly.
HostEspecially when you get to the 78 and you think about how big that airplane is.
HostThe wing, the engines, everything.
HostYou know, you're just flying up there smiling.
Tom HeidemaOh, and I am.
Tom HeidemaEvery time I've ever taken off, I had a big smile on my face.
Tom HeidemaAnd you'll notice how different airplanes have different personalities to them.
Tom HeidemaThe 7 8, I believe, emulates 757 controls.
Tom HeidemaBut you can never duplicate a 757.
Tom HeidemaThat thing's just so cool.
Tom HeidemaOh, my gosh, that thing's a Ferrari with wings.
Tom HeidemaThere are other airplanes that are just gentle and predictable.
Tom HeidemaAnd really a triple seven is the nicest airplane from a standpoint of just being a nice, big, happy, predictable airplane.
Tom HeidemaIt doesn't bite you the way otherwise can.
Tom HeidemaIt's just a wonderful airplane to land, to fly.
Tom HeidemaIt feels so good flying it in your hands.
Tom HeidemaOther airplanes aren't like that.
Tom HeidemaThe 727 was a solid airplane, but that thing could.
Tom HeidemaIt could hit you every once in a while.
Tom HeidemaI mean, you.
Tom HeidemaYou'd make all these great landings.
Tom HeidemaAll of a sudden you crush one and be like, what did they do?
Tom HeidemaI did.
Tom HeidemaYou know, same flare up 20 times in a row, and all of a sudden you're like, prang it.
Tom HeidemaYeah.
Tom HeidemaAnd you would.
Tom HeidemaYou'd had three rear engines, so sometimes you'd have to deal with compressor stalls and that number two center engine.
Tom HeidemaEspecially with like crosswind take.
Tom HeidemaThere were always things that you had to consider depending on what airplane you were flying.
Tom HeidemaEven today, you have the 737 Max, where crosswinds become an issue because you can't really lean that wing over the way you put in other airplanes.
Tom HeidemaSo by flying different airplanes, you learn their nuances and really get to enjoy.
Tom HeidemaI know people are always, well, is this plane better than that one?
Tom HeidemaThere are planes we like better than others, but if it flies, it's cool.
Tom HeidemaI've enjoyed every airplane I've ever flown, and I've flown a few squirrely ones.
HostThat's part of the process of building your time, though.
HostYou always Got to fly a couple squirrely airplanes.
HostThat put some hair in your chest, right?
HostYeah.
HostOh, the MU2.
HostYeah.
Tom HeidemaThat's a skateboard with three wheels, man.
Tom HeidemaThat thing was just.
HostI, I, you know, I've heard that the people that really understand how that airplane works and how it can bite you.
HostI heard that a lot of people do actually like that airplane.
HostBut if you don't understand how everything works, that thing will.
HostWill put you down in a heartbeat.
HostIs not forgiving at all.
Tom HeidemaNo, it doesn't give you break.
Tom HeidemaAnd it's loud, but it's fast.
Tom HeidemaAnd it was a cool airplane, too, but like that, you really had to tend to that airplane.
Tom HeidemaYou couldn't look the other way because it'll.
Tom HeidemaIt could do something to you if you're not careful.
Tom HeidemaIt was temperamental.
HostYeah.
HostIt definitely has a record.
HostNot necessarily the best record, you know, but I've met a lot of people that enjoy flying it, so don't be afraid of it.
Tom HeidemaOh, I, I did too.
Tom HeidemaI did.
Tom HeidemaBut I just remember it was a bit more of a challenge.
HostWhat was your favorite.
HostWhat would you.
HostWhat would you say your favorite airliner you've ever flown was?
HostI.
HostI know you noticed.
HostYou said the 72 was fun.
HostYou also mentioned your love for the 7 5.
HostYou also talked about the Triple 7.
HostSo it sounds like there's a lot that are kind of in the top tier, but if you had to choose one, what would be your favorite?
Tom HeidemaWell, I would say the 757 with Rolls Royce Angels.
HostOkay.
Tom HeidemaIt was so everything about it was cool.
Tom HeidemaIt looked cool, it flew cool, it sounded cool.
Tom HeidemaYou could go into.
Tom HeidemaI remember going to somewhere like Santa Ana, Orange County, John Wayne Airport, and you pretty much pick your brick, and it would land on it and would land nicely.
Tom HeidemaAnd I had those eight big brakes back there.
Tom HeidemaIt would stop taking off out of there.
Tom HeidemaYou push the throttles up, and it was just roaring and ready to go.
Tom HeidemaThat you could cut an engine on takeoff of that thing and barely knew it.
Tom HeidemaIt was just going to keep climbing.
Tom HeidemaAnd the missions that an airplane could fly, also, you going in and out of La Paz, Bolivia, or it would carry more and do more than any airplane I think we've ever had.
Tom HeidemaIt was just unmatched in performance.
Tom HeidemaAnd it had enough of a combination to where you still kind of flew a six pack with a little bit of EFIs, but it had enough of the newer technology that say that the 727 didn't have to.
Tom HeidemaWhere you could also, you could kind of let it do its own thing too, when you needed to.
HostYep.
HostYeah, it sounds like a great airplane.
HostI wish they're still around, obviously, because my dad was a pilot as well.
HostHe flew.
HostHe retired American two years ago.
HostHe was Piedmont USAir, US Airways.
HostKind of made his whole way up there, but he was timing a 7:2 and a 7:5.
HostAnd those are his two favorite airplanes, planes he said he's ever flown.
Tom HeidemaYeah, yeah.
Tom HeidemaYep.
Tom HeidemaYeah, yeah.
Tom HeidemaAnd like I said, I.
Tom HeidemaI've liked them all, but that one definitely stands out.
HostWhat, what got you involved in pilot hiring?
HostHas it always been kind of a passion of yours to help give back, or was it just something someone came up to you one day, was like, you'd be good at this.
HostLet's do this.
Tom HeidemaWell, I spent 25 years with the union doing pilot professional standards.
HostOh, cool.
Tom HeidemaSo I had to deal with a lot of people we shouldn't have hired, and now I wanted to deal with the people we should.
HostThat's awesome.
Tom HeidemaSo that was kind of a turning point for me because I really, truly enjoyed doing my pilot assistance work.
Tom HeidemaSo pro standards wasn't all bad.
Tom HeidemaYou'd have some that you're like, okay, folks you wouldn't want to deal with, but you could also make a difference.
Tom HeidemaProfessional standards with our union is, I think it's really been the industry standard.
Tom HeidemaThey do so many good things to help people, but obviously you're dealing with a lot of different elements at the same time.
Tom HeidemaSo in that, like, I don't want to paint it as a bad picture, but we did have you kind of run into some of the more difficult people in that organization, also in that committee.
Tom HeidemaSo years ago, I thought it would be cool just to see who I'm handing my job to.
Tom HeidemaAnd as an interviewer, having done this for so many years, it meant a lot to me to say, okay, I'm getting older now.
Tom HeidemaI'm 62 now, and I've only got a few years left.
Tom HeidemaAnd this was actually several years ago.
Tom HeidemaSo it was in my late 50s.
Tom HeidemaAnd I thought, I want to involve myself in who I passed the torch to.
Tom HeidemaAnd you remember my CJO speech incorporated that, where I talked about these pilots from 1935?
HostYeah, you did.
HostYou pointed right to them.
HostRight by the wall.
HostYeah, yeah.
Tom HeidemaDid I give you CJ over there by the.
Tom HeidemaOh, really?
Tom HeidemaBecause, yeah, you.
HostYou met.
HostYou met us before, like, early on in the interview, gave us a big speech in the museum and then over in the back room by the 7 6.
HostI think it is that's up there over there.
HostThat's where we got our cjs.
Tom HeidemaYeah, that's kind of the secret.
Tom HeidemaSo everybody knows that they're in there.
Tom HeidemaThey pretty much think they're getting C.J.
Tom Heidemawe'll switch it up every once in a while and bring it somewhere else.
HostYeah.
Tom HeidemaAnd they're gonna, well, okay, you'll be hearing from us.
Tom HeidemaAnd it said, it's a cjo, you.
HostGotta have some fun with it.
Tom HeidemaRight, Right.
Tom HeidemaYeah.
Tom HeidemaAnd so there is.
Tom HeidemaThere's a picture in there in the museum, the C.R.
Tom Heidemasmith Museum there that's very near and dear to me.
Tom HeidemaAnd it was taken in 1935.
Tom HeidemaIt's of 10 pilots and there's a Curtis Condor behind them.
Tom HeidemaAnd I go and I look at that picture anytime I'm about to interview pilots.
Tom HeidemaAnd because these were forefathers, some of these guys got hired in the 20s, like I said, I was mentioning that in my little CJO speech, that this is our legacy.
Tom HeidemaAnd these guys created this almost 100 years ago.
Tom HeidemaThey were hired not knowing this would one day be the biggest airline on the planet Earth.
Tom HeidemaAnd I, as a steward of my profession, have always wanted to pass my job along to somebody who has that same passion for it.
Tom HeidemaAnd I don't know if I'm parlaying a little bit or if we're going to get into it, but there are things that I truly look for when I interview pilots.
Tom HeidemaAnd it goes beyond the flying of the airplane.
Tom HeidemaA lot of that is the passion of what we have, what we represent, how people view us, and what I'm passing along to the next generation.
HostI was going to ask.
HostWe are kind of going to get into that as well.
HostObviously we have you here, someone that's involved with hiring, that has a passion for hiring.
HostIt's a very hot topic.
HostAnd people always want to know, like, what can I do to stand out?
HostWhat can I do to get the job?
HostWhat can I do?
HostOr what is something that is almost an immediate no, thank you, apply again in six months.
HostSo if you have any tidbits or anything that really to focus on, let's say into the interview or that process.
Tom HeidemaYeah.
Tom HeidemaSo we have kind of a rating during the interview that we look at candidate.
Tom HeidemaAnd in teaching our interviewers, one of the most important things that we look at is a well rounded person, that he or she is somebody who we can truly say, this is going to be a great employee for our company.
Tom HeidemaAnd we don't have that much time to evaluate that.
Tom HeidemaSo there are a lot of Necessary tools there.
Tom HeidemaPersonally, I have three really big things I look for, the first of which is, is this a person who can technically fly the airplane?
Tom HeidemaIs it somebody I can sit next to, somebody who will gel well on the flight deck and who can safely fly the airplane and truly be a professional in their job as a pilot?
Tom HeidemaAnd that's a big one.
Tom HeidemaBut there are two other ones that once I know this is a capable pilot, because there are plenty of people who will go and they get their license, they get their ratings, they can fly airplanes, but they don't do well with people.
Tom HeidemaThey're just kind of.
Tom HeidemaThere's something missing there.
Tom HeidemaAnd that, to me, can even be a dangerous thing, because you want to know that that person next to you is somebody you can rely upon.
Tom HeidemaThe number two thing I call inside of the wingspan.
Tom HeidemaHow are they with the flight attendants?
Tom HeidemaHow are they with the passengers?
Tom HeidemaHow are they with taking care of.
Tom HeidemaWe had some turbulence.
Tom HeidemaWhat are they doing to accommodate everybody else?
Tom HeidemaWhat about maintenance issues, things like that?
Tom HeidemaTo where inside the wingspan?
Tom HeidemaAnd have they accommodated all of those nuances to where everybody knows that they're all involved and they're all an asset and that they all feel welcome to create a safe environment and a positive environment.
Tom HeidemaI always go back, I say hello to everybody.
Tom HeidemaI want these people to know that I'm their advocate and that I really want everybody to have a good time and have safe aircraft.
Tom HeidemaSo that can go on.
Tom HeidemaAnd you can kind of find that out quickly when.
Tom HeidemaIf you're asking an interview question and somebody seems at times, believe it or not, a little bit condescending, or if they just.
Tom HeidemaWell, I focus on the airplane and that's it.
Tom HeidemaIt's like, no, no, you need to.
Tom HeidemaYour role goes outside of that as a pilot.
Tom HeidemaAnd the third is what I call outside of the wingspan, to truly be somebody.
Tom HeidemaAnd I know not everybody's like this, but I have always been an absolute ambassador of my occupation.
Tom HeidemaAnd you can measure that.
Tom HeidemaIt's not like you're going to, hey, the old saying about, how do you know someone's a pilot?
Tom HeidemaThey'll tell you in the first five minutes.
Tom HeidemaIt's not always like that.
Tom HeidemaBut I really enjoy hiring the type of pilot that if they're in the terminal and they see a little old lady that seems like she doesn't know where she's going, or a person who's a little bit duress or whatever, whatever, to approach that person, because we as pilots are an occupation that others look up to.
Tom HeidemaAnd to be outside of the wingspan also, how do you do it?
Tom HeidemaWith ticket agents, with maintenance, with dispatch, with ground people, all of them.
Tom HeidemaAre you somebody who embraces.
Tom HeidemaAnd it's amazing how even on the ground where somebody once pointed something.
Tom HeidemaI forgot exactly what it was, but pointed something out on the airplane that was very pertinent, that he just sees these airplanes push back every day and goes, hey, is that okay over there?
Tom HeidemaAnd I forgot what it was.
Tom HeidemaBut it was a very relevant matter.
Tom HeidemaAnd by being a person who welcomes that and says hello to other.
Tom HeidemaI mean, it's like I got a couple of Jeep wranglers, right?
Tom HeidemaWhenever I cruise down the street, we got the Jeep wave.
HostYeah.
Tom HeidemaYou know, we're jeeple.
Tom HeidemaBut what I notice is in the terminal, I will say hi to other pilots.
Tom HeidemaYeah, maybe that makes me a nerd.
Tom HeidemaBut hey, there are other pilots, you know, that we have, we have that in common.
Tom HeidemaAnd so maybe I go outside of that a little bit more than most people do.
Tom HeidemaBut for me, that role means a lot.
Tom HeidemaAnd it means a great deal to me to, to portray that.
Tom HeidemaAnd I use the word advocate a lot, but to advocate that within the public, outside of the.
HostYeah, I mean, you can definitely tell that too.
HostAnd one thing I'll give you credit for is putting us at ease when we're in that moment too.
HostLike, you know, it can be a very stressful situation for a lot of people.
HostThis is everything you've ever worked for.
HostYou see your dreams right in front of you and there is the chance that, you know, you get thanks, but no thanks or thanks apply in 6 months or, you know, and that's not to say it's not going to happen or it's not the same airline won't hire you immediately.
HostIt's just how it shapes out in that situation.
HostBut it was very much a put at ease situation.
HostAnd kind of like a deep breath and like, all right, this feels like a good place.
HostI feel very like, I feel welcomed, you know, and it was very cool to see that.
HostAnd I think it's very important.
HostAnd the type of person you're talking about hiring, I mean, I've seen it with flying and it's important you deal with so many personalities as a pilot and you never know who's having a bad day and being able to manage those personalities and being able to manage people and realize, you know, all right, well, let's try to put a smile on people's faces and maybe let's try to calm the situation down or talk to the gate agent, talk to the ramp or talk to the ground.
HostScrew all that kind of stuff.
HostAnd it's as simple as just saying hi and just being a person, you know, and that can really change the day and make it more personal.
Tom HeidemaYeah, it's true.
Tom HeidemaAnd we look for that.
Tom HeidemaAnd when it comes to our interview process, I love that it happens right in front of a DC3.
Tom HeidemaIt's a beautiful area.
Tom HeidemaAnd we truly want the people who we interview to feel like they've been embraced and regarded and heard.
Tom HeidemaOne of the things we always say is, hey, when we introduce ourselves, you'll notice we made it pretty brief.
Tom HeidemaWhy?
Tom HeidemaBecause it's not about us, it's about you.
Tom HeidemaIt's your time.
Tom HeidemaTell us about yourself and have a nice organic conversation.
Tom HeidemaWhen it comes to.
Tom HeidemaWhen it comes to getting hired or not hired, not getting hired or having to reply in 6 months isn't a bad thing.
Tom HeidemaSometimes it's great because we feel the candidate is just not quite ready.
Tom HeidemaThen they'd have trouble in training, maybe trouble getting through oe.
Tom HeidemaAnd it's by no means a dig on that candidate.
Tom HeidemaThe way that I always compare it is it's kind of like when you're baking a cake, you throw it in the oven.
Tom HeidemaOven.
Tom HeidemaIt might not be ready quite yet.
Tom HeidemaIt's just got to cook a little longer.
Tom HeidemaAll the ingredients are there, but it's.
Tom HeidemaThe cake isn't quite ready yet.
Tom HeidemaAnd we have.
Tom HeidemaWe're pretty strong about that if we believe that.
Tom HeidemaAnd a lot of times we'll just say, okay, just a little bit more.
Tom HeidemaWe just need.
Tom HeidemaAnd we'll notice that in certain ways, sometimes it'll be technical knowledge where we think they.
Tom HeidemaWe'd like to see them just gain a little bit more before they come to us.
HostYep.
HostAnd one thing I felt, I don't know if you agree with or if this is how you kind of is a big part of it is having good, clean logbooks that kind of felt like it was a big thing as well.
HostJust seeing the different logbooks that I saw in the people that got cgos.
HostThey seem to be the people that really kind of put a lot of attention into the small details in their logbook to make sure it was presented well bound.
HostWhatever it is, it seemed to help out a lot.
Tom HeidemaYeah, well, it does.
Tom HeidemaIt shows that you're taking.
Tom HeidemaWe look for a lot of things with the log books.
Tom HeidemaThe I've seen applicants with 20,000 or claim to have 20,000 hours and not one logbook and said to me, well, just call this employer.
Tom HeidemaThey'll tell you, I work there, and that's why.
Tom HeidemaThat's my time right there.
Tom HeidemaYeah.
Tom HeidemaOkay.
Tom HeidemaOthers who literally logged everything.
Tom HeidemaOriginal logs.
Tom HeidemaThe reason we like those so much is because we're able to look back and find the 6149s.
Tom HeidemaIf there are failed events, if there, we can kind of see where the continuity of that is.
Tom HeidemaAnd not everybody's logbooks are great.
Tom HeidemaAnd if they don't have that, you're able to get an 8710 from the FAA, and we can fill that in.
Tom HeidemaBut one thing we have run into far too much are when somebody says they've never failed a training vendor, a checkride, and we'll go into the log books and we'll find four, five of them.
HostLike, you're like.
Tom HeidemaAnd then when you.
Tom HeidemaWhen you ask them about it, like, hey, what?
Tom HeidemaYou know, it says a little different here than what your app says.
Tom HeidemaOh, I forgot about that.
Tom HeidemaLike, right.
HostNo pilot forgets about a failed check ride that lives with you for the rest of your life.
HostRight.
Tom HeidemaI even remember bad check rides.
Tom HeidemaI mean, we're like, oh, you got on a crowd.
Tom HeidemaYou're like, oh, my gosh, I can't believe it passed me.
HostYeah.
Tom HeidemaAnd that's.
Tom HeidemaWe're talking 40 years back.
Tom HeidemaYeah.
Tom HeidemaWhere you had a couple where you're like, oh, man, am I glad I got through that one.
Tom HeidemaTo say that the burden of having failed a checkride.
Tom HeidemaI know today especially, pilots are worried about, well, how many failed checkrides are too many.
Tom HeidemaI've seen it all over the place.
Tom HeidemaIt depends on when those checkride failures were, what you learned.
Tom HeidemaHow.
Tom HeidemaWhen somebody says to me, hey, I failed to write, but it's completely the examiner's fault.
Tom HeidemaIt wasn't me.
Tom HeidemaLike, okay, it's a red flag.
Tom HeidemaBecause I want to say, even if you have an overzealous examiner, we've seen that, too.
Tom HeidemaWhat did you learn from it?
Tom HeidemaHow did you prepare the next time?
Tom HeidemaWhat did you do?
Tom HeidemaHow did you move forward from that experience?
Tom HeidemaAnd when you see somebody who talks about their learning and that, they embrace that and they embrace their failures.
Tom HeidemaYou know, being a football player and us having an athletic background, you learn.
Tom HeidemaYou learn from your mistakes.
Tom HeidemaYou learn from losing.
Tom HeidemaIf you win all the time, it's not a benefit.
Tom HeidemaYou have to be able to lose with your face up and win with your head down.
Tom HeidemaI guess to be able to handle.
HostBoth and facing failure and facing a loss or anything.
HostI think it's very commendable to see how you respond, you're going to have adversity in your life at, at some point, things are not going to be perfect.
HostWhether you had a perfect record.
HostNow there's me a day when the deck is stacked against you and you have to perform in a very bad situation, essentially.
HostAnd seeing that you have had a failure in the past, I'm not saying it can help you, but being able to explain it, take responsibility for it, and be truthful, it can show how you handle adversity.
HostYou can come back from failure, you can put it together and you can get it done.
HostAnd I'm sure that's something that you don't hold against them if they're.
HostThey're honest with you and they fully explain what happens.
Tom HeidemaYeah, exactly.
Tom HeidemaAs a matter of fact, the humility of that, if anything, is a benefit to say, okay, you know, I'm not perfect.
Tom HeidemaHowever, this is what I strive for and this is why I try to be better.
Tom HeidemaAnd there are some cases where you really.
Tom HeidemaYou'll throw.
Tom HeidemaBecause we pretty much know everything that's gone on.
Tom HeidemaThere have been people who have had incidents and accidents, things like that, who are like, hey, you're not off the table here.
Tom HeidemaJust, we'll put some questions out there that kind of open the door to that and they'll go a different direction with it.
Tom HeidemaAnd like, well, we're kind of hoping you'd talk about this.
Tom HeidemaAnd we want to see the human side of people because that's important to us, that we're hiring people who throughout their careers will want to continually be on a path of learning.
HostYeah.
HostWhich I think is huge.
HostAnd you're gonna be a busy, busy guy here soon because all that's starting to pick right back up and getting after it.
HostSo if you're listening to this, make sure if you ever see Tom, be like, hey, I heard you on the pilot's pilot podcast, but it's really cool.
HostAnd like I said, I felt like I was at ease when I was there.
HostMy two interviewers are great.
HostPut me at ease.
HostI mean, the first thing to say is like, you're here for a reason.
HostRight?
HostWe saw something we like.
HostIt's essentially just.
HostJust talk to us and just be.
HostBe yourself.
HostThat's what we want to see.
HostI mean, my, my short experience in, in flying, it's a lot comes down to personality and can I be in this airplane with this person for 16 hours?
HostGoing to Shanghai, you know, are we going to get out wanting to.
HostTo report each other pro standards.
HostAre we going to get out wanting to go get some dinner and enjoy a different culture.
HostSo a lot of it I feel like comes down to that.
HostAnd I'm sure you would agree as well.
Tom HeidemaI do.
Tom HeidemaI do.
Tom HeidemaAnd you meet.
Tom HeidemaI've made some amazing friendships, not just at American, but within the industry, just as I've often said, I said in my last post is that we're kindred spirits.
Tom HeidemaAnything we're distracted from, anything from hummingbirds to helicopters and if it flies, we say squirrel, what are we talking about?
Tom HeidemaAnd to have that connection with other pilots has made for some wonderful friendships.
Tom HeidemaIt truly has made life worthwhile.
Tom HeidemaAfter my medical event a couple of years ago, I've just the support that I got from the people I cared about meant so much.
HostAbsolutely.
HostAnd we'll kind of end.
HostWe're going to talk about the book here in a second and kind of end off on, you know, American has been such a big part of your career.
HostIt really seems like it's a company you love.
HostIt's, it's been a great 39 years.
HostYou say that you've been there as a pilot now that maybe it's changing a little bit, but the choices are out there.
HostRight.
HostWe've seen people go from, from one major to another.
HostThey have options, which has not always been the case.
HostAs someone that is is talking for American and just your personal experience, why would you recommend American just in what you've experienced?
Tom HeidemaThere are the most important thing.
Tom HeidemaA part of your job isn't your job, it's the family you go home to.
Tom HeidemaSo.
Tom HeidemaBut we often will see, for instance, a Delta pilot who lives in Fort Worth, Texas, that doesn't want to commute to Atlanta or whatever.
Tom HeidemaSo we hire them and we've lost pilots, Delta who live in Atlanta or whatever.
Tom HeidemaSo when it comes to the big three, they're all solid.
Tom HeidemaThey're all really good guys and ladies and they're just.
Tom HeidemaI can't be one of those.
Tom HeidemaOh, we're number one.
Tom HeidemaBecause these.
Tom HeidemaI think they're all really solid organizations, the legacy carriers and even the discounts.
Tom HeidemaMy gosh, I go to these pilot conferences and we just yuck it up with the spirit guys and the.
Tom HeidemaI mean, they're all a really good bunch.
HostYeah.
Tom HeidemaSo why American?
Tom HeidemaIt has been, it's been a wonderful company for me and I can't speak for the management of other airlines or the unions of alpa.
Tom HeidemaBut, but first of all, allied pilots, they are true.
Tom HeidemaThey really are proponents.
Tom HeidemaThey're really, they have created so many different committees to embrace so many facets of a person's life.
Tom HeidemaThey're really proactive in being there for the pilots.
Tom HeidemaWe see them at all the conferences.
Tom HeidemaAnd I'm quick to say, hey, I may be on the hiring side here, but our union is absolutely wonderful.
Tom HeidemaAnd to see that kind of strength standing behind us has really made a big difference.
Tom HeidemaEven our aeromedical people are just unbelievably good folks.
Tom HeidemaSafety Aliyah.
Tom HeidemaThey're people I've always truly been able to trust.
Tom HeidemaOn the American side of it, they.
Tom HeidemaYears ago, when I got hired, there was a little more of an adversarial relationship with management and a guy by the name Mark Cronin, who is our believe our east area, like line.
Tom HeidemaI think he was just below the vvp.
Tom HeidemaThe director of Line Ops East, I believe, came up with a new concept where he said, I want the chief pilots to be there for the pilots.
Tom HeidemaAnd he said, I will not have a chief pilot who does not advocate for a pilot.
Tom HeidemaAnd he hired.
Tom HeidemaHe started hiring chief pilots, coachable and personable and compassionate.
Tom HeidemaAnd that made such a huge difference to me because even at the time, working at professional standards, to be able to talk to these guys who we truly shared that regard for.
Tom HeidemaThe pilot group, for me, created a cohesion that made.
Tom HeidemaThat set things apart that were.
Tom HeidemaIf a pilot was having a tough time, he called the union, but he could also call his chief pilot.
Tom HeidemaAnd when I had my medical event a couple years ago, the embrace that I got from the management side, I don't know if I'd have got any United Delta.
Tom HeidemaI hope that I would.
Tom HeidemaBut they literally called me every day, the area director of flight.
Tom HeidemaThey wanted to make sure I was okay.
Tom HeidemaAnd it meant it was like a soft landing to a very difficult event.
Tom HeidemaAnd it meant the world to me to see that the American Airlines side of things was just so supportive.
Tom HeidemaSupportive of me, definitely.
HostAnd I love that.
HostAnd we're getting into that right now.
HostSo I got the book we talked about a little bit before we started this Is it Flying and Dying.
HostI got it off Amazon.
HostI mean, the title just jumps right off to you.
HostIt's.
HostYeah, I know it's going to be impactful.
HostWe talked a lot about flying.
HostSo if you want to focus on the other part, about the dying part, and kind of talk about where it came from and how what happened.
Tom HeidemaYeah, I had something very unexpected happening two years ago, and I haven't posted about it.
Tom HeidemaI haven't really talked about it other than friends at the airline know about It.
Tom HeidemaI've been a health and fitness advocate my whole life, as it fit to fly.
Tom HeidemaIt started actually as kind of a fitness page and it transitioned into more of an aviation thing.
Tom HeidemaBut I had my whole life, never had any issues with anything.
Tom HeidemaDidn't really ever get sick.
Tom HeidemaI always felt great.
Tom HeidemaAnd one night I was down in my.
Tom HeidemaWe have a sauna in the house here.
Tom HeidemaAnd I really like the hot.
Tom HeidemaThe cold transition to where I will just kind of cook in the sauna for a while and I'll jump into the ice bath or like into a cold shower and feels amazing.
Tom HeidemaI go and I fall asleep.
Tom HeidemaWell, one night I did that November 4th of a couple years back.
Tom HeidemaAnd when I got in a cold shower, it kind of didn't feel quite right.
Tom HeidemaAnd I hit the shut off and I went upstairs and I laid down next to my sweetie and she said, you want me to turn the light off?
Tom HeidemaI'm like, nah, give me a second.
Tom HeidemaAnd I went.
Tom HeidemaAnd I went into ventral ventricular fibrillation and cardiac arrest.
Tom HeidemaMy heart stopped.
Tom HeidemaAnd just to let you know, cardiac arrest is not a heart attack.
Tom HeidemaHeart attacks are when you have a blockage to the heart.
Tom HeidemaIt continues to pump, kind of like a fuel pump.
Tom HeidemaIt's lost a little bit of the fuel coming to it.
Tom HeidemaCan't pump stuff.
Tom HeidemaWell, a cardiac arrest is like pulling the cables off of that fuel pump.
Tom HeidemaYour heart stops.
Tom HeidemaAnd I turned blue and my eyes rolled back and I went out almost immediately.
Tom HeidemaI remember a quick gasp in my chest and that was it.
Tom HeidemaAnd at that point, Desiree loved my life.
Tom HeidemaShe started.
Tom HeidemaShe jumped on me, she shook me, tried to see what was up, started CPR, called 911.
Tom HeidemaMy son, who hadn't been home in months from college, came home.
Tom HeidemaHe also was certified in cpr.
Tom HeidemaHe came up and gave.
Tom HeidemaHere's this, you know, this 22 year old kid who sees his dad dying and turned blue.
Tom HeidemaAnd he's giving me mouth to mouth resuscitation.
Tom HeidemaHe's on me.
Tom HeidemaHe's.
Tom HeidemaI'm just, you know, I'm laying back and he went outside of himself, as did Desiree, who was just working so hard on me just to try and give me compressions to.
Tom HeidemaThe two of them did such a wonderful job.
Tom HeidemaAbout 10 minutes later, my friend Clay Hollister comes through the front door, who happened to be the head medic at Porta gms.
Tom HeidemaAs he's carrying a defib, he said, is it Tom?
Tom HeidemaAnd one of the things medics don't like is having to ever go to a friend or a relative's house, and he ran upstairs, and they hooked me up.
Tom HeidemaAnd just after 10 minutes, I got my first shock.
Tom HeidemaI went about 2, 3, 4 shocks in there somewhere, and then I just became unshockable.
Tom HeidemaMy.
Tom HeidemaThere was nothing there anymore.
Tom HeidemaVery fortunately, I got a shot of lidocaine.
Tom HeidemaAt that point, I had a little bit of a tremble in my heart.
Tom HeidemaAnd after seven shocks, I came back to life.
Tom HeidemaSo I was without a pulse for about 20 minutes.
Tom HeidemaNeedless to say, that kind of altered my flying career a little bit, and it was a rough night.
Tom HeidemaThe odds of coming back after an event like that are very low.
Tom HeidemaOut of hospital, cardiac arrest has a very high mortality rate, and the chance of brain damage, of cognitive impairment or even physical impairment is also very high.
Tom HeidemaCardiac arrest.
Tom HeidemaSo at that point, I woke up several hours later in the hospital, and I'm like, what, though?
Tom HeidemaAnd Des was standing over to me.
Tom HeidemaShe said, your heart stopped.
Tom HeidemaWe almost lost you.
Tom HeidemaAnd then one of the first things I thought is, there goes my career.
Tom HeidemaBut.
Tom HeidemaAnd that's where a lot of my healing had to begin, is to say, okay, well, I've done this for a long, long time, and how do I transition from what I am now to what.
Tom HeidemaHow I still want to fulfill a legacy that I've been handed?
Tom HeidemaAnd every morning, I would go have a little area here we call the Zen den.
Tom HeidemaIt overlooks our lake.
Tom HeidemaAnd I would just start to write, and I would hang those words out in front of me.
Tom HeidemaAnd we're familiar as pilots at something called the 36 inch rule, or if you kind of take a step back from something, you look at it, you have a better way of processing it.
Tom HeidemaAnd every morning, I would.
Tom HeidemaI would just write, and I must have written 75, 80,000 words or more.
Tom HeidemaAnd there was a healing in that and being able to say, okay, this is where I'm in.
Tom HeidemaWhere's my egoic attachment to say?
Tom HeidemaIt's so.
Tom HeidemaIt's so fun to say, hey, I'm captain Tom, and I'm, you know, dreamliner and Instagram and all that, whatever.
Tom HeidemaAnd what I really realized and all that is that you could love your job, but it can't love you back.
Tom HeidemaYou can love flying, but it can't love you back.
Tom HeidemaAnd that's why one of the things I said earlier was the most important part of your job is the family you come home to.
Tom HeidemaWe love flying, but our families are so much more important because they not only we love, but love us back.
Tom HeidemaAnd they create the True solid foundation of who we are and what we are.
Tom HeidemaAnd they were all there, friends and family and the people I cared about.
Tom HeidemaSo it was, at that point, a matter of trying to rebuild things.
Tom HeidemaAnd the book talks a lot about all the crazy antics of the stuff I did earlier on my career, stuff we got into and some of the pro standards things.
Tom HeidemaIt also talks about pilot mental health and how important that is.
Tom HeidemaAnd I'd say almost as important as a pilot reading that would be a pilot's spouse or significant other, because it addresses a lot of what pilots go through, from the subtleties of our schedules to significant events like what happened to me and how I went from 10ft tall and bulletproof to, gosh, what's the next step?
Tom HeidemaLuckily, I had a huge amount of sick time.
Tom HeidemaAnd I'm still burning through it now, slowly but surely, and unable to kind of transition out a little bit more on my own terms, which has been very beneficial.
Tom HeidemaAnd then the other thing that happened, and I address it in the book, is.
Tom HeidemaAnd I've never really paid enough, I guess, regard to this, but I had a magnificent afterlife experience.
Tom HeidemaI remember going out of my body and that still.
Tom HeidemaI mean, every time I talk about it, I get chills.
Tom HeidemaIt's not a dream or hallucination.
Tom HeidemaThere is still.
Tom HeidemaThere's.
Tom HeidemaIt is magnificent what awaits us.
Tom HeidemaAnd I was sent back from that and that.
Tom HeidemaIt also details that in flying and dying.
Tom HeidemaWhen I wrote the book, one of the most important things was everything I had thought of that was going through my mind, I wanted to put down.
Tom HeidemaSo it wasn't like I went from chapter one to chapter 34.
Tom HeidemaI think the first chapter I wrote was 20 or 21.
Tom HeidemaAnd then I wrote the chapters and here and there.
Tom HeidemaAnd then all of a sudden, as my brain was reattaching all these.
Tom HeidemaWho know, I don't know how it works neurologically, but I would think of stuff that I did in my 20s, like, oh, I gotta write about that.
Tom HeidemaAnd it would come to me in this incredible detail.
Tom HeidemaI mean, you know, we almost got crunched by the Duke lacrosse team on a layover one night, Meanest Guy apart.
Tom HeidemaIt talks about some really interesting stuff.
Tom HeidemaYeah, that was an interesting story.
Tom HeidemaJust stuff that happens.
Tom HeidemaI mean, there are a lot of stories like that where you're like, oh, my gosh, I remember when that happened.
Tom HeidemaI wrote about it, and the intention was not for it to turn into a book, but once I had all of that and I cut a bunch of the stuff that I didn't Think mattered out.
Tom HeidemaIt turned into a timeline of everything I'd done from the time I was a flight instructor to present day.
Tom HeidemaAnd there was continuity there.
Tom HeidemaAnd in writing that, and really putting my heart and my emotion and not just telling the stories, but describing everything that was going on was so healing for me.
Tom HeidemaI had not even planned to release this as a book.
Tom HeidemaAnd a couple of friends read it and said, tom, you need to put this out here.
Tom HeidemaThis is gonna, this will help people who are dealing with things.
Tom HeidemaAnd that propelled.
Tom HeidemaIt caused me to say, okay, let's put it out there.
Tom HeidemaBecause anytime you write a book or anything like that, even you know how it is, you do an Instagram post, if it gets a million views, you're going to have a bunch of people, doesn't matter how positive it is, they're going to say something negative.
Tom HeidemaAnd I'm like, do I really want to expose myself to people who are going to say mean things?
Tom HeidemaI mean, what do I.
Tom HeidemaI don't know if I really want that.
Tom HeidemaBut what I realized about that book is that it will help people.
Tom HeidemaAnd even if it helps just one person, it was worth putting out there.
Tom HeidemaAnd so far the reviews on it have been very positive.
Tom HeidemaI've been really flattered by what people have said about it and that it seems to make sense to people, which is very important to me.
HostYeah.
HostAnd I mean, going back to the pandemic when people were faced with losing their jobs, there's a big identity crisis for pilots.
HostAnd kind of what you're explaining is you realize that flying is not going to love you back.
HostLike, it's about your family, it's about your personal life.
HostAnd so many pilots find themselves wrapped up in the thought that they are a pilot.
HostSo having the ability to write something that kind of can help people realize, like, hey, like, this is your profession, this isn't who you are, this is a job that you have.
HostIt's a duty you can do and it has a big part of you.
HostBut like, you need to make sure you appreciate the grind we talked about earlier.
HostYour wife, your kids, just life, just day to day situations, talking here, talking to people.
HostSo it sounds like you, you kind of have a story to tell.
HostAnd I'm glad that you wrote that book because I'm sure it's going to help a lot of people realize that.
Tom HeidemaI do.
Tom HeidemaAnd I, and I really enjoyed it.
Tom HeidemaI narrated it too.
Tom HeidemaI turned it into an audio.
HostPerfect.
Tom HeidemaThat was fun.
Tom HeidemaBecause I get this really bad habit of imitating people once I know Somebody for a little while, I kind of learn their mannerisms a little more.
Tom HeidemaAnd all of a sudden I'm like, and I don't mean to mock people when I do it, but it's kind of fun.
Tom HeidemaAnd so with the book, I was able to do a lot of different characters and voices in it, too.
Tom HeidemaAnd rather than have somebody else narrate it, I bought a mic.
Tom HeidemaI built a studio inside of one of my walking closets in the house, and I soundproofed it and everything.
Tom HeidemaI did the whole.
Tom HeidemaI narrated the whole book.
Tom HeidemaTook me a long time to do it because I'd go through a chapter and go, ah, that one doesn't really have the energy.
Tom HeidemaI, I'm going to redo it.
Tom HeidemaAnd it became another really fun project as I was reading that book to, to.
Tom HeidemaTo.
Tom HeidemaTo turn it into an audio book.
HostAbsolutely.
HostI mean, what a story.
HostLike, you think about your, your 65.
HostYou know, your career up to age 65, where you have to say bye to aviation.
HostYou don't ever.
HostYou don't think about how many pilots actually leave on medical before that.
HostI don't know the exact statistic.
HostYou might, since you kind of went through that, but there's a lot of people that don't make it to 65.
HostHealth reasons, medical reasons.
HostYou're not guaranteed to fly till 65.
HostIt's just, you might think you are, but.
HostAnd you might think you're bulletproof.
HostAs someone that took their health very seriously, which I, I have to say, had to have helped you out in this situation, I believe the story would have been way different if you wouldn't have paid attention to your health and kind of neglected it for your whole life.
HostSo, I mean, I'm glad you did.
HostI'm glad we're having this conversation right now.
HostYeah.
HostSo if anyone's listening is, take that, take that from that as well.
HostAs a pilot, it's very easy to fall into the.
HostI'm tired, I'm on a layover, I work hard.
HostOr even just the, the.
HostI eat greasy food, I have a beer or two every single night.
HostThat's not a good lifestyle to have.
HostWe have to find a way to stay active.
HostYou sit down in a plane for eight hours a day, you sit down in the hotel.
HostYou really got to find a way to, to stay healthy and make it a priority.
HostAnd like you said, you know, you go ups and downs.
HostYou know, don't get, don't beat yourself up too much when you're in a down slope and you're Eating pizza every single night and then enjoy the time where you're enjoying a salad and eating healthy foods.
Tom HeidemaI agree.
HostYeah, I agree.
HostBut Tommy, I, I really appreciate you coming on and talking about this.
HostI, I, I got this yesterday when I got back from a trip and I can't wait to read it.
HostI think it's going to be a great story and I hope everyone takes a lot out of this.
HostIt's, I mean, you offer a lot of great information about American.
HostYou're in a very unique situation where you see every pilot that essentially is going to come through these doors and, and represent the brand and carry on the legacy as you will talk to when they go through it.
HostSo it's really awesome.
Tom HeidemaThe other thing about the book too is it's giving me an opportunity to give back.
Tom HeidemaThe portions of the proceeds are going to go to sudden cardiac arrest survivors, American Heart association, and to buy AEDs in public places.
Tom HeidemaI did a post the other day.
Tom HeidemaThe AED in my gym has saved two lives already.
Tom HeidemaAnd to think that, and kind of an interesting fact, 356,000 people die every year of sudden cardiac arrest.
Tom HeidemaAnd a lot of it is 10.
Tom HeidemaYou go down 10% in probability of surviving every minute that you have to wait for an aed.
Tom HeidemaAnd so if there's an AED hanging on the wall there, you've got it and you get that thing hooked up.
Tom HeidemaFirst minute after cardiac arrest, that person has a 90% chance of survival, whereas if it's after 10 minutes, they have a 10% chance of survival.
Tom HeidemaSo I'm using, I'm using these, a lot of the funds to finance it.
Tom HeidemaIf I go somewhere, a gym or something, and there's no AED there, I'm going to buy them one because it's my way of kind of giving back to what?
HostYeah, so I mean, you said you're without AED for 10 minutes.
HostSo what, you're looking at a 10% chance.
HostThe odds are stacked against you.
Tom HeidemaYeah, yeah.
Tom HeidemaI think after 10 minutes it was without CPR, it's a 98% mortality.
Tom HeidemaSo 2%.
Tom HeidemaI believe the numbers.
Tom HeidemaIf you have CPR, it increases that without CPR.
Tom HeidemaYeah.
Tom HeidemaYou're about 1 in 50.
Tom HeidemaSo it depends.
Tom HeidemaThe numbers have, the new numbers that I saw are a little bit more.
Tom HeidemaAnd that's the big thing.
Tom HeidemaLearn CPR too.
Tom HeidemaYeah, they were, the last ones I saw were 98 when I published the book.
Tom HeidemaBut I saw some stuff recently that says you can double or triple your channel chances of survival with cpr and if you don't know it, just start pumping on a chest and about 120 beats a minute or so, like the song Staying Alive is the cadence you want to use on someone's chest because a friend of mine, Delta Airlines pilot Matt Clark, went into cardiac arrest just coming in over.
Tom HeidemaIt was Newfoundland.
Tom HeidemaHe ended up in Montauk, but his captain had not done CPR in 30 years, went over there and started pumping on his chest.
Tom HeidemaThey used the onboard AED and they brought him back to life.
Tom HeidemaSo crazy.
Tom HeidemaLearning cpr.
Tom HeidemaHaving an AED nearby will save thousands of lives if we're able to get this program rolling.
HostWell, I mean, I'm really glad that everything worked out so we could have this conversation, so we could share it, so you could write the book, so you could have it.
HostHonestly, sounds like you have the opportunity to help change a lot of lives and you're gonna.
HostYou're gonna take it and run from it.
HostAnd I think that's really cool to recognize kind of what happened, how you can kind of pivot and realize one flying's not your whole career.
HostYou.
HostYou can do anything and you can enjoy it and just enjoy it and give back.
HostSo I think it's really cool.
Tom HeidemaYeah, I agree.
Tom HeidemaI agree.
HostWell, Tom, I appreciate your time.
HostThis has been a lot of fun talking with you, and it's cool to kind of have this conversation.
HostWayne and I was just a little peon looking up at you, hoping that you guys would say yes at one point.
HostSo 1.
HostThank you for that.
HostI appreciate it.
Tom HeidemaNice to give you dj and I'm glad you're with.
HostYeah, it's been.
HostIt's been a great time.
HostI have my 8 month review coming up soon, so getting close to being done with my probation year and just enjoying it while I can.
HostBut I really appreciate this.
HostIt's been a lot of fun and I hope we can stay in touch.
Tom HeidemaYeah, absolutely.
HostAll right, well, I appreciate it, AV Nation.
HostThat's a wrap on today's episode.
HostThank you so much for listening to the podcast.
HostI hope you enjoyed it.
HostIf you haven't left a review yet, please go to Spotify.
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HostSo go ahead and leave a five star review.
HostI mean, that'd be beneficial and hopeful, but if you like the podcast, please leave a five star review on both of those and also write a nice little comment there.
HostIt helps more people find this podcast.
HostAnd that's the goal, right?
HostTo get more aviators to find more people in aviation.
HostIf you already left a review, grab your dad's phone, leave a review on his end.
HostBut AV Nation, I hope you're having a great day and as always, happy flying.
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