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Travel Tips

Fear of Flying - How to Deal
By:Kelly Brink

Are you scared to death every time you step on a plane? Don't be embarrassed many people are afraid to fly and there are things you can do to reduce your anxiety that don't involve Valium or a pitcher of Margaritas.

You Will Need

• Knowledge of airplane maintenance

• A seat over the wing

• Pleasant diversions

• Breathing exercises

• A quick tension-relieving trick
Step 1: Familiarize yourself with airplane safety

Familiarize yourself with airplane safety measures. Commercial airliners have more than one back-up system for every piece of equipment that could fail, and they receive 12 hours of maintenance on the ground for every hour spent in the air.

Step 2: Sit over the wing

Request a seat over the wing. The ride is smoothest and most quiet there.

Step 3: Bring diversions

Bring aboard as many diversions as you can think of-an engaging book, puzzles, good music, a stack of magazines, a variety of snacks, a DVD player. You want your mind so occupied that you won't notice every in-flight hiccup.
If you run out of things to do, talk to the person next to you.

Step 4: Alert the flight attendant

Tell the flight attendant that you're a nervous flyer as soon as you board. He or she will take the time to reassure you about any odd sounds or sensations.

Fight the urge to use sedatives on a flight. They double your risk of developing deep vein thrombosis, a potentially fatal blood clot, and the threat lasts for four weeks.

Step 5: Dismiss turbulence

Stop panicking that the plane is going down every time you hit a little bump. Airliners are designed to withstand more turbulence that Mother Nature is capable of creating. In fact, turbulence has never taken down a commercial airliner.

Step 6: Meditate

Take some deep breaths whenever your morbid imagination begins to trump your common sense: Inhale slowly through your nose as your stomach expands, then exhale gently.

For an instant tension releaser, do the Ten-Second Grip-squeeze your armrests as hard as you can while tensing your stomach and leg muscles. Hold for ten seconds and release. Repeat until you're calm.

Step 7: Reassure yourself

Reassure yourself that the pilots are well equipped to deal with any situation-their training is comparable in time and intensity to that of a medical doctor. Air traffic controllers undergo rigorous instruction, too.

Step 8: Repeat this mantra

If all else fails, repeat this mantra: "My chance of being in a plane crash this year is about 11 million to one." It's far, far safer than driving!

Get more air travel tips http://www.howcast.com/categories/1575-Air-Travel






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