How to Decide Like an Airline Pilot (When Life Gets Complicated)
What 25 years in the cockpit taught me about making clear decisions when the noise is louder than the signal.
Pilot Nick â 6 min read
Youâre sitting at the kitchen table at 11 p.m.
The job offer is on the screen. More money. Different city. A boss youâve never met. Your partner is asleep upstairs. Youâve read the email forty times, and somehow each time it gets less clear, not more.
You want someone to just tell you what to do.
Up at 35,000 feet, we know that feeling.
A warning light flashes. The weather ahead has changed. A passenger needs medical attention. Two hundred people are sitting behind us â most of them watching a movie, completely unaware and we have minutes, sometimes seconds, to choose.
Hereâs what most people get wrong about pilots: they assume weâre calmer because weâre braver. Or smarter. Or wired differently.
Weâre not.
Weâre calmer because weâre following a system. And the good news is â you can borrow it.
The Cockpit Reality
Forget what youâve seen in movies.
When something goes wrong at 35,000 feet, the cockpit doesnât get louder â it gets quieter. The first words out of a captainâs mouth arenât a command. Theyâre almost always the same four:
âOkay. Letâs slow this down.â
Not because weâre calmer than you. Because weâve been trained to follow a system before we follow a feeling.
Hereâs a small example. A few years ago, flying into a European airport at night, we got a thunderstorm cell sitting right on the approach path. Tower was vectoring everyone around it. Our fuel was fine, but not infinite. The first officer looked at me. I looked at the radar. And before we did anything else, I said the line every pilot says in moments like this:
âAviateâNavigateâCommunicateâ
Fly the plane first. Figure out where to go second. Talk about it third.
That order matters. Most bad decisions in life and in cockpits happen because someone reverses it. They start communicating (panicking, asking everyone for advice, doom-scrolling) before theyâve stabilized the basics.
So hereâs the framework. Five steps. Use it next time life gets loud.
The Pilot Decision Framework
Step 1: Slow the situation down
In the cockpit, the first move when something goes wrong isnât to act. Itâs to create time.
We climb to a safer altitude. We level off. We put the autopilot on. We give ourselves a stable platform to think from.
Pilots have a phrase for this: wind the clock. It comes from the old days when, before doing anything else in an emergency, youâd literally wind the cockpit clock. The point wasnât the clock. The point was: do one small, deliberate thing before you do anything big.
You can use this immediately. Before responding to the email, the offer, the argument, the news do one small deliberate thing. Make tea. Walk around the block. Sleep on it. Youâre not avoiding the decision. Youâre stabilizing the platform youâre going to make it from.
Step 2: Define the real problem
Hereâs where most people get stuck â and where most cockpit errors happen too.
The emotional problem is rarely the actual problem.
When that warning light flashes, the emotional problem is âsomething is wrong and people could die.â The actual problem might be âa faulty sensor is sending a bad signal.â Those are very different problems. They have very different solutions.
In real life: The emotional problem is âI have to decide whether to take this job.â The actual problem might be âI donât know what I want my life to look like in five years, and this offer is forcing me to figure it out.â Those are also very different problems.
Ask yourself: What am I actually trying to solve here? Write it in one sentence. If you canât, youâre not ready to decide yet â youâre ready to think.
Step 3: Gather only what matters
In the cockpit, we have access to roughly a thousand pieces of information at any given moment. Engine temperatures. Fuel flow. Wind speeds. Navigation data. Traffic. Weather. Cabin pressure. ATC chatter.
If we tried to process all of it, weâd freeze.
So we filter. Hard. We ask one question: What information do I need to make THIS decision, right now?
Everything else gets ignored. Not forever â just for now.
You can use this immediately. When youâre stuck on a decision, write down the three pieces of information that actually matter. Not the ten things youâre worried about. The three things that would change your answer.
If you canât think of three â you probably already know your answer.
Step 4: Choose a safe, good-enough option
This one is the hardest for high-achievers to swallow.
Pilots are not trying to make the perfect decision. Weâre trying to make a safe, sensible one quickly and then move on.
Thereâs a concept in aviation called the 80% rule. If you have 80% of the information and 80% confidence in your choice, decide. The last 20% almost never arrives in time, and waiting for it is itself a decision â usually a worse one.
In life, âperfectâ is the enemy of âdecided.â Most of the regret I hear from people isnât about choosing wrong. Itâs about not choosing at all, and watching the option expire.
Step 5: Commit and adapt
Hereâs the part Hollywood gets right.
Once a pilot makes a decision to divert, to return, to continue we commit. We donât keep relitigating it every two minutes. We execute, and we monitor.
But and this is critical committing is not the same as being stubborn. As new information arrives, we adjust. A diverted flight might re-divert if conditions change. Weâre not married to the decision. Weâre married to the outcome: getting everyone on the ground safely.
Decide. Monitor. Adjust. Thatâs the loop. Most people get it wrong by either flip-flopping (never committing) or doubling down (never adjusting). Neither one flies.
Pilots arenât better decision-makers because theyâre smarter. Theyâre better because they use systems when their emotions would rather not.
What This Looks Like in Real Life
Letâs stop talking about cockpits for a minute and put the framework on the ground. Three scenarios. Same five steps. Watch how the noise drops out.
The framework above is the whole system. But knowing the steps and using them when your hands are shaking are two different things.
Below the line, I walk through three real scenarios most of us face a job offer, a move, and a high-pressure financial decision â and show you exactly how a pilot would work each one, step by step. Plus the printable Pilot Decision Checklist I keep taped inside my flight bag.
This is the part I wish someone had handed me the first time life got loud.






