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Articles: Recreation -
Flying
By Yvonne
Volante
Ask a room full of people what hobby they have and you
will get as many answers as there are people. Others will confess
that they don’t have a hobby. They probably do; but just don’t label
it as such. By definition, a hobby is an activity or interest
pursued outside one's regular occupation and engaged in primarily
for pleasure.
Whether flying, stamp collecting, chat rooms, trains,
softball,scrapbooking, golf, reading, painting, tap dancing, yard
work, crafts, auto mechanics, music, hunting down garage sales,
sewing, fishing, cooking, boating, furniture refinishing, javelin
tossing or a plethora of other activities or interests the key
element is balance. You must find balance between your family life
and your extracurricular
activities.
Too much of a good thing turns bad. Everyone should
havean outlet and a special interest that they enjoy doing for
themselves. Self indulgence, to a point, is quite healthy. Escaping
from day to day grinds to take some time to devoteto your flying
hobby or concentration is therapeutic. You’ve all heard, "if Mamma
ain’t happy, no one’s happy." It doesn’t matter if your role is
father, mother, husband, wife, boyfriend, girlfriend, son, daughter,
brother or sister, if you’re just going to work or school and have
noreal outside activities, you’re probably not always the most
friendly person to be around.
Conversely, if you bury yourself and it seems to others
that all you care about or all you ever want to do is fly all day
(or hang around the airport), you’re setting yourself up or
prolonging discontent. People deal with depression in many ways.
Some sleep all the time. Others want to do nothing but read,read,
read. Still others will spend hours upon hours downstairs building a
bigger, faster widget, just to avoid the real cause of their
frustrations. Hobbies are supposed to be a healthy outlet, not a
catalyst to ignore issues that need
addressing.
Likewise, hobbies can get very expensive. Sure, flying,
snow mobiles, motorcycles and ski equipment are obviously expensive.
But sometimes those seemingly low cost activities can add up. You
start out with trying to budget for the weekly flying lessons. Then
you need (or want) the unnecessary (but fun) goodies that we all
"need" to pursue our passion. "Let’s see, do we pay the mortgage
this month, or get that (fill in the blank) that you just have to
have?"
If your flying hobby is doing more harm than good, if
it’s dipping into the family budget and time allocation, more than
you can or should be spending, it’s time to reevaluate. Not stop the
flying, mind you, just make sure it's appropriate for you and your
family and its lifestyle.
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