Yes — fear of heights and fear of flying are different things. Acrophobia (fear of heights) is triggered by visual cues like standing on a balcony or cliff where you can see the drop. In an aircraft, you're enclosed in a cockpit and the sensation is more like floating than standing on a ledge. Many pilots who are uncomfortable on tall buildings feel perfectly fine in an aeroplane. The physical disconnect from the ground removes the trigger for most height-fearful people. That said, some people do experience anxiety looking down during flight — this typically fades with exposure over the first few lessons. A trial flight is the best test. Source: recurring r/flying and Quora thread topic.
Completely normal — solo flight anxiety is the single most discussed emotional topic in student pilot communities. Hundreds of threads on Reddit r/flying, Pilots of America, and PPRuNe describe students who felt numb hands, racing hearts, and even made excuses to delay solo. One student admitted: 'On two occasions my instructor invited me to fly solo, but I made up an excuse — I said I was too tired. The truth is, I was too scared.' Your instructor will only send you solo when you've demonstrated consistent competence. The nervousness fades the moment you rotate. Nearly every pilot describes the post-solo feeling as pure, unforgettable joy.
Panic responses during flight training are discussed frequently on aviation forums. Experienced instructors are trained to recognise and manage student anxiety — they can take the controls at any time. If you experience anxiety, communicate openly with your instructor. Techniques that help: systematic desensitisation (gradually increasing challenge), chair flying (mental rehearsal of procedures on the ground), focusing on procedures rather than feelings, and breathing exercises. If anxiety is severe or persistent, a brief course of CBT (cognitive behavioural therapy) can be effective. Note: benzodiazepines and most anti-anxiety medications are disqualifying for flying, so pharmaceutical management requires careful medical planning with your AME.
Extremely common. 'Radio anxiety' or 'mic fright' is one of the most frequently reported student pilot fears, often cited as more stressful than the actual flying. Students fear sounding incompetent in front of experienced pilots and ATC. The solution is practice: listen to LiveATC.net to familiarise yourself with the pace and phraseology, practise calls on the ground with your instructor, write out your calls before keying the mic during early flights, and remember that ATC controllers are used to student pilots and are generally helpful and patient. Confidence builds rapidly — most students report that radio anxiety drops significantly after 5-10 flights.
Stall anxiety is a very common fear among student pilots, frequently discussed on r/flying and PPRuNe. The key is understanding that training stalls are performed at safe altitudes (typically 3,000ft+ AGL), the aircraft recovers quickly with proper technique (release back pressure, apply power), and modern training aircraft like the Cessna 172 have very docile stall characteristics. Your instructor will demonstrate first and then guide you through incrementally. After a few practice stalls, most students find them unremarkable. The real danger is an unexpected stall close to the ground — which is exactly why you practise them at altitude, so the recognition and recovery become automatic.
Industry estimates suggest around 80% of student pilots who begin training never complete their licence. The most commonly cited reasons on forums are: running out of money (costs often double the advertised price due to needing more hours than minimum), loss of momentum from gaps in training (weather cancellations, scheduling issues, life events), fear and anxiety (particularly around the solo milestone), poor instructor relationships (high CFI turnover, personality clashes), and loss of motivation during plateaus (especially around landings). The best mitigation strategies: budget for at least 55-65 hours, fly 2-3 times per week consistently, find an instructor you connect with, and push through plateaus — they're a normal part of learning.
Very normal. Imposter syndrome — feeling like you don't deserve your licence or aren't a 'real pilot' — is widely discussed on Pilots of America, r/flying, and aviation blogs. A study of 241 student pilots at Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University found significant correlation between imposter feelings and self-handicapping behaviour. Many newly-licenced pilots feel uncomfortable calling themselves a pilot, doubt their decisions in the cockpit, and compare themselves unfavourably to more experienced pilots. The reality: your PPL is a licence to learn. Every pilot was a 45-hour beginner once. Fly regularly, keep learning, and accept that competence builds with experience — you earned your licence through demonstrated skill.
Training plateaus are periods where progress seems to stall despite continued effort — most commonly around landings, radio communication, and navigation. These are a well-documented phenomenon in motor skill acquisition, discussed extensively on every aviation forum. Your brain is consolidating complex skills, and temporary regression is normal. Strategies: take a day or two off to let your brain process (but not weeks), try 'chair flying' — mentally rehearsing procedures on the ground, ask your instructor to approach the problem differently, and consider a single lesson with a different instructor for fresh perspective. Almost every pilot who completed their PPL experienced plateaus — they always pass.