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 Elite Veteran
Posts: 870
      Location: Louisiana & Florida | I am interested in becoming one. Can anyone tell me about this good/bad/ugly? |
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 Texas Taco
Posts: 7499
         Location: Bandera, TX | Why do you want to become a flight attendant? I personally hate to fly, but have to every view months. Having to fly every day just seems very anxiety attack provoking to me. 
I can see this being cool if you get to fly internationally and see the world that way.
Good luck. |
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  That's White "Man" to You
Posts: 5515
 
| Did you hear about that plane that went missing?! |
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 Hugs to You
Posts: 7551
     Location: In The Land of Cotton | Cowboyup is one. She has been for a long time. My son is also one. It is not as glamarous as you think it is. One reason is because of all the rude, don't give an attitude of people. My son had an incident on his plane once where the famous person was escorted off - per the pilots. The horrible things they said about him on the internet made me so mad. He gets tired of living out of a suitcase sometimes. But, he has gotten to travel and see a lot. The pay is only so so, to start out with. |
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Hungarian Midget Woman
    Location: Midwest | I heard there were lots of layoffs going on. I knew a gal who did it, but she was laid off and then became a stay at home mom. |
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Sideways Riding Expert
Posts: 11371
        Location: ND--it snows, it floods, it snows, it floods | Go for it! If it's something that interests you then why not? I couldn't do it but mainly because I'd want to slap too many people (I'm not the most gracious person around LOL) but I give kudos to those that can and do. |
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 Elite Veteran
Posts: 870
      Location: Louisiana & Florida | Well I currently work for the post office, so most of the things that have been said you can say about the job I have now. As far as living out of a suitcase I'm ok with that. |
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 Elite Veteran
Posts: 870
      Location: Louisiana & Florida | Whiteboy - 2014-03-24 3:26 PM Did you hear about that plane that went missing?!
I didn't hear about this lol JK |
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| The pay is crummy. You are treated like a second class citizen. You don't get long layovers in fun places. You work all day (3-6 flights per day) waiting on rude passengers for hardly no compensation. Then you get to your destination and have only X amount of hours to rest, eat, call family, etc. before you have to be up at 3 AM to catch the van to the airport for a 5 AM flight.
Yes, there are some exceptions where you do get longer layovers and can take family, etc. but they are few and far between.
On your days off, you are so dang tired that it takes at least one day to recover before you feel human.
Granted, some companies are better than others however the airline industry as a whole is undergoing some major changes that make quality of life even worse.
I'm not trying to be a Debbie Downer and shoot down your enthusiasm but I feel like you need the good, bad, and ugly before you make a decision.
Good luck!
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 Elite Veteran
Posts: 870
      Location: Louisiana & Florida | BigMomma - 2014-03-24 4:08 PM The pay is crummy. You are treated like a second class citizen. You don't get long layovers in fun places. You work all day (3-6 flights per day) waiting on rude passengers for hardly no compensation. Then you get to your destination and have only X amount of hours to rest, eat, call family, etc. before you have to be up at 3 AM to catch the van to the airport for a 5 AM flight. Yes, there are some exceptions where you do get longer layovers and can take family, etc. but they are few and far between. On your days off, you are so dang tired that it takes at least one day to recover before you feel human. Granted, some companies are better than others however the airline industry as a whole is undergoing some major changes that make quality of life even worse. I'm not trying to be a Debbie Downer and shoot down your enthusiasm but I feel like you need the good, bad, and ugly before you make a decision. Good luck!
Thank you very much. These are the things I needed to hear. If I would have heard everything I know now about the post office I would have never wasted my time on it. Thank you |
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  That's White "Man" to You
Posts: 5515
 
| NFRhereicome - 2014-03-24 3:07 PM Whiteboy - 2014-03-24 3:26 PM Did you hear about that plane that went missing?! I didn't hear about this lol JK
Either did the TSA for a while at least! |
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 Hugs to You
Posts: 7551
     Location: In The Land of Cotton | BigMomma - 2014-03-24 4:08 PM The pay is crummy. You are treated like a second class citizen. You don't get long layovers in fun places. You work all day (3-6 flights per day) waiting on rude passengers for hardly no compensation. Then you get to your destination and have only X amount of hours to rest, eat, call family, etc. before you have to be up at 3 AM to catch the van to the airport for a 5 AM flight. Yes, there are some exceptions where you do get longer layovers and can take family, etc. but they are few and far between. On your days off, you are so dang tired that it takes at least one day to recover before you feel human. Granted, some companies are better than others however the airline industry as a whole is undergoing some major changes that make quality of life even worse. I'm not trying to be a Debbie Downer and shoot down your enthusiasm but I feel like you need the good, bad, and ugly before you make a decision. Good luck!
I didn't have the heart to say it. |
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Extreme Veteran
Posts: 550
  
| The bad: When you start, the pay is bad - not much better than minimum wage. You are only paid when the plane is in flight, so boarding & deplaning are not paid. You are also on call a lot, but aren't paid for that. You are actually pay is 80-100 hours a month, so even though the per hour sounds nice, it is less than you would expect. Trips are bid in order of seniority, and if you are a junior flight attendant, you layover in small cities, really short layovers, with nothing to do. The more senior FAs pick first, so by the time they get to you, most of the good trips are gone. The exception is when they need to fill a trip fast -if a flight is delayed in to a city and they don't want to delay the corresponding flight out, or someone gets sick. Then they fill it from the bottom, so a junior FA can get some really nice trips that way. The downside to that is they call you, and you have an hour to get to the airport.
If you are flying on vacation, you fly standby, which means you are the last one on, after all paying passengers. You can spend all day in an airport trying to get somewhere and still be bumped.
When the economy experiences a downswing, the first thing people give up is vacation, so layoffs are common.
Training is intense, and stressful, and quite a few do not make it through.
You will fly most holidays
The good: As you gain seniority, you get better trips & are less likely to be laid off.
It is different every day. If you don't like your crew, no worries, they will probably be different the next trip.
You do get to see a lot of neat things and meet a lot of interesting people.
A lot of people do find it glamorous, and it is an interesting career.
I considered getting my pilots license, and talked to a few pilots. Their consensus was do it. Same job for more pay, and very little interaction with passengers. One also told me it was the only career he knew of that people also did on their day off -most pilots have small planes and fly for pleasure on their off time.
I did it when I was younger, and it was a great part of my life that I don't regret. Sometimes when I see a plane taking off, I wish I was on it. But I am also happy that I'm no longer doing it. Now that I have small kids, it wouldn't fit my life.
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Member
Posts: 9
 Location: Mississippi | I was a flight attendant for a while. The responses are true. Low pay, long hours, rude passengers. You will work most every week-end and holidays. You also meet alot of really nice people as well and see different places. If you dont mind living out of a suitcase and not being able to rodeo or horse show go for it! But if your into your horses it probably wont work for you. |
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 Elite Veteran
Posts: 870
      Location: Louisiana & Florida | Thank you everyone. I don't really want to give up my horses. They are all young so I guess I thought I could. I have and still can live out of a suitcase I love seeing the world. I traveled for a living for 3 years being in one city one week and across the country the next but sounds like this is different. I would love to hear more stories if anyone else has or still is one. |
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  Angel in a Sorrel Coat
Posts: 16030
     Location: In a happy place | My sister was until she broke her hip. She still misses it to this day. But everything bad that has been said she said about it also. If you stay with it it gets better. But I promise you you better be thick skinned. She liked the challenges most people don't though. She always liked coming through in a pinch. That being said I am not sure she is really my sister. Wouldn't work for me. |
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Expert
Posts: 1419
    
| I did it for a year and was laid off after sept 11..It was a BLAST but everything people are saying on here is true....you are gone every weekend and holidays. I was with Northwest before they were bought out by Delta, you do get 15+ days off a month and you are not paid until they back away from the gate. It was fun and I went over seas alot but first thing i did after I left was get into horses! |
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Veteran
Posts: 170
   Location: Texas | My wife worked for Delta for 17 yrs. She started in 87 when flying was still something you appreciated and a luxury except for the business class. She quit 2 yrs after 9/11 becuase things had gone downhill so much and because when Delta closed their base at DFW, we both decided she didn't want to commute to NY/SLC or ATL. With commuting a 3 day trip can turn into 4 or 5 with getting there and back. They don't even have positive space on a flight to get to their trip. She does medical transcription at home now. She loved flying in the "good ole days", but when everything went downhill, their were families of 8 thinking it was a chartered jet for them. She loved working first class and dealing with the business class. As in most jobs, it's easy to sit back and think about how fun it "used" to be. She had 17 yrs and was in the bottom 1/3 of seniority. There is a crapload of F/A's with 30-40 yrs so plan on plenty of crappy trips. Most people thought she got on a plane and flew to one stop and went to eat and partied then went one place the next day. Most trips were 4-6 legs some with less than an hour turnaround, getting to a hotel (which by the way they aren't near as nice as they used to be) at midnight and with the time change getting up in 4-6 hrs. It's not an easy job like most of the public thinks. You fly free but that free is standby and now you're lucky to get on a plane becuase you better be picking a flight for vacation thats a time when no one else wants to go and have a back up plan. If you're single with not kids and don't mind a schedule on the fly I would look at Southwest first, they seem to be one of the better ones. Whatever you decide, Good Luck..
Edited by motorjock 2014-03-25 8:16 PM
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  Warmblood with Wings
Posts: 27846
           Location: Florida.. | Makes me appreciate them alot more.. I always did but wow! They always seem to make it look so glamarous and they are always happy and nice so thought it must be a great career.. Doesnt seem bad if thats how you like to live but its not what I thought either.. |
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  Golden Heart
Posts: 5662
     Location: SD | I sat next to a lady (on a flight) yesterday who was talking with the flight attendant. The lady's daughter has been a flight attendant for 3 years. She works for Spirit and loves it. She is based out of DFW, but lives in Tampa. She chooses her flights. Delta needs flight attendants according to this woman. The flight attendant on our United flight is only on her second week. She was still nervous. |
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