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Printed from https://web1.writing.com/main/profile/blog/sindbad/day/11-3-2025
Rated: 13+ · Book · Experience · #2171316

As the first blog entry got exhausted. My second book

Evolution of Love Part 2
November 3, 2025 at 1:53am
November 3, 2025 at 1:53am
#1100751
April 17, 2018. Southwest Flight 1380 was climbing toward cruise altitude when passengers heard a sound no one ever wants to hear on an airplane—a massive explosion that shook the entire aircraft.
The left engine had catastrophically failed. Metal shrapnel tore through the fuselage like bullets. One piece shattered a window. At 32,000 feet, where the air is too thin to breathe, the cabin instantly decompressed.
Oxygen masks dropped. People screamed. A passenger was partially pulled toward the broken window by the violent suction. Chaos doesn't even begin to describe it.
In the cockpit, Captain Tammie Jo Shults heard the explosion, felt the plane shudder, and watched her instruments light up with warnings. One engine gone. Fuselage damaged. Cabin pressure lost. 149 souls depending on her next move.
She didn't panic. She went to work.
"Southwest 1380, we have part of the aircraft missing," she radioed calmly to air traffic control, her voice as steady as if she were ordering coffee. "We're going down."
But here's what most people don't know: this wasn't the first time Tammie Jo Shults had faced death in the sky.
Before she was a commercial pilot, she was Lt. Commander Shults—one of the first female fighter pilots in the United States Navy. She flew F/A-18 Hornets as an aggressor pilot, training other naval aviators in combat tactics. The military told her she couldn't fly combat missions because of the Combat Exclusion Policy. So she became so skilled that combat pilots trained against her.
She'd spent years making split-second decisions at supersonic speeds. Years staying calm when instinct screamed at you to panic.
And on that April morning, every hour of that training kicked in.
She manually controlled the crippled 737, fighting asymmetric thrust from the single working engine. She communicated with air traffic control. She coordinated with her first officer. She executed a rapid emergency descent—dropping altitude fast enough to reach breathable air, but controlled enough not to tear the damaged plane apart.
Twenty-two minutes after the explosion, she landed the aircraft in Philadelphia. Smooth. Controlled. As if she'd practiced it a thousand times.
Passengers later said she walked through the cabin afterward, calm and composed, checking on every single person. "Nerves of steel" was the phrase they kept using.
One passenger, Jennifer Riordan, had been critically injured by the window failure. She died later at the hospital—the only fatality. It was a tragedy. But 148 other people walked off that plane alive because of Shults' skill, training, and unshakeable composure under pressure.
Captain Chesley "Sully" Sullenbergger—the pilot who famously landed US Airways Flight 1549 on the Hudson River in 2009—called to praise her handling of the emergency. When Sully calls to say you did good, you really did good.
Southwest Airlines commended her. Aviation experts analyzed the flight data and said her decisions were textbook perfect. Passengers wrote letters calling her their hero.
But here's the detail that gives you chills:
Tammie Jo Shults wasn't even supposed to be flying that day.
She'd swapped shifts with her husband, also a Southwest pilot, to accommodate their schedules. A routine trade. The kind pilots do all the time.
Which means 149 people boarded a plane that morning with no idea that the woman in the cockpit had been specifically, almost impossibly, prepared for exactly what was about to happen.
You can call it luck. You can call it fate. Or you can call it what it actually was: decades of competence, training, and grit meeting the one moment where all of it mattered most.
Tammie Jo Shults didn't ask to be a hero that day. She just showed up, did her job with extraordinary skill, and brought almost everyone home.
She proved what she'd been proving her entire career—that competence doesn't care about gender, that the best person for the job is simply the best person for the job, and that sometimes the person standing between disaster and survival is someone who refused to accept the word "can't."
She broke barriers in the Navy. She saved 148 lives in Philadelphia. And she did both the same way: by being so damn good at what she does that no one could argue with the results.
Sometimes heroes don't wear capes. Sometimes they wear pilot wings and speak in calm, measured tones while manually landing a crippled aircraft.
And sometimes, they're exactly where they need to be—even when they weren't supposed to be there at all.


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Printed from https://web1.writing.com/main/profile/blog/sindbad/day/11-3-2025