It also takes a kind of self-love, Nige said, and this manifests as confidence.
I saw the truth in his words, but I couldn’t imagine ever putting that truth into practice. The fact was, I
No, Nige would say softly whenever this happened.
But I let one mistake ruin many a flight.
Sometimes my self-loathing would spill onto Nige. After having a go at me, I’d have a go at him.
He’d shake his head.
He had a herculean will. You’d never have guessed it from his appearance. Average height, average build, steel-gray hair combed neatly to one side. He wore spotless green overalls, spotless clear spectacles. He was a Navy civvie, a kindly grandpa who loved sailing—a top bloke. But he had the heart of a fucking ninja.
And at that moment I needed a ninja.
33.
Over several months Nige the Ninja managed to show me how to fly a helicopter while doing other things, countless other things, and, what was more, to do so with something approaching self-love. These were flying lessons, but I think back on them as life lessons, and gradually there were more good ones than bad.
Good or bad, however, every ninety-minute session in Nige’s Squirrel Dojo left me hooped. Upon landing I’d think:
But first: the debrief.
This was where Nige the Ninja really put me through it, because he sugarcoated nothing. He spoke bluntly and wounded blithely. There were things I needed to hear, and he didn’t care about his tone when he told me.
I got defensive.
He pressed on.
I shot him hate-you-forever stares.
He pressed on.
I said,
He pressed on.
I stopped listening.
Poor Nige…He pressed on.
He was, I realize now, one of the most truthful people I’ve ever known, and he knew a secret about truth that many people are unwilling to accept: it’s
Not that he was categorically opposed to compliments. One day, almost in passing, he said that I appeared to lack any…fear.
I explained that I hadn’t been afraid of death since the age of twelve.
He nodded once. He got it. We moved on.
34.
Nige eventually released me, set me free like a wounded bird restored to health, and with his certification the Army pronounced me ready to fly Apaches.
But nope—it was a trick. I wasn’t going to fly Apaches. I was going to sit in a windowless classroom and
I thought: Could anything be crueler? Promise me a helicopter, hand me a stack of homework?
The course lasted three months, during which I nearly went insane. Every night I’d slump back to my cell-like room in the officers’ mess and vent to a mate on the phone, or else to my bodyguard. I considered leaving the course altogether. I’d never even wanted to fly Apaches, I said to everyone, petulantly. I wanted to fly the Lynx. It was simpler to learn, and I’d get back to the war faster. But my commanding officer, Colonel David Meyer, quashed that idea.
Meant to do? The course was torture!