On my very first flight as a captain, a passenger started choking in first class. When I ran out to save him, I saw the same birthmark that had haunted my entire childhood. The man I’d spent 20 years searching for was suddenly lying at my feet — and he wasn’t who I thought he was.
For as long as I can remember, I’ve been obsessed with the sky.
It all started with an old, crinkled photograph they showed me at the orphanage where I grew up.
I was about five years old in that picture. I was sitting in the cockpit of a small airplane, grinning like I owned the entire horizon.
Behind me stood a man wearing a pilot’s cap, and I spent 20 years believing that man was my father.
It all started with an old, crinkled photograph.
He had his hand on my shoulder, and a massive, dark birthmark stretched across one side of his face.
That photograph was the single most important thing in my life. It was a connection to my past and a path for my future.
Every time life tried to knock me off course, I went back to it.
When I failed my first written exam, when my savings ran out halfway through flight school, when I worked double shifts just to afford simulator hours, I kept that photo folded in my wallet.
On the worst nights, I’d take it out and study it like a map.
It was a connection to my past and a path for my future.
I told myself it wasn’t random. That someone had put me in that cockpit for a reason.
When instructors said I didn’t have the background or the money to be a successful pilot, I believed the photo more than them.
That picture pushed me through ground school, endless simulators, and every setback I encountered.
I was sure that if I could just sit in that seat again, with the sky all around me, everything in my life would finally make sense.
Someone had put me in that cockpit for a reason.
Well, today was the day those dreams came true.
At 27, I finally sat in the captain’s seat of a commercial jet.
It was my first flight as a full-fledged captain.
“Nervous, Captain?” my co-pilot asked.
I looked out at the runway stretching toward the sun and placed a hand over the photo in my pocket, tucked right against my heart.
I finally sat in the captain’s seat of a commercial jet.
I smiled at him. “Just a little, Mark. But childhood dreams really can take flight, can’t they?”
“They sure can,” he said, giving me a thumbs-up.
“Let’s get this bird in the air.”
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