Graduate achieves her dream job of becoming a pilot after quitting her job as an air stewardess
British Airways air stewardess quits to become a pilot at a cost of £120,000 – but still needs to find a job after FlyBe hired her on a training scheme and went bust
- Suzie McKee, 25, from Portsmouth, Hampshire, worked as cabin crew for a year
- Graduate worked multiple jobs to raise the funds needed to train as a pilot
- She is now preparing to fly her first air craft with excited passengers
A British Airways air stewardess has revealed how she quit her job to become a pilot.
Suzie McKee, 25, from Portsmouth, Hampshire, spent a year working in the cabins of British Airways flights before deciding she would rather fly the planes instead.
Suzie, who is a languages graduate, needed £120,000 for training and started the process by raising huge £30,000 by working as a barmaid and a receptionist in an MOT garage, and borrowing the rest from her parents.
In February 2019 the ambitious former air stewardess started the painstaking process of applying to study the profession with Flybe, but after the airline went bust in March, Suzie decided to pursue her dream without any airline backing.
Suzie McKee, 25, (pictured) from Portsmouth, Hampshire, quit her job as an air stewardess for British Airways to become a pilot (left, before, and right, as a qualified pilot)
Suzie (pictured) said she had a great time working as cabin crew but always pictured herself flying the planes
Suzie explained that she was always the one volunteering to take tea to the cockpit and to do the safety checks before take off. Pictured: Suzie when she was a stewardess with a colleague
The languages graduate admitted she became tired of doing safety demonstrations and pouring drinks, while longing to be in the cockpit where the action was.
She explained: ‘I’d had a great time being cabin crew, but I always had this picture in my mind of me in the cockpit. I realised I wanted to actually fly the plane.
‘I knew I didn’t want to be serving the chicken pasta in the back with the passengers, I wanted to be at the front of the plane where the action was.
‘I would always be the one who volunteered to take the tea into the cockpit for the pilots or do the safety checks with them before take off.’
The former air stewardess (pictured) who can speak three languages, has already visited 55 countries and is eager to fly her first air craft with passengers (pictured left, at work, and right, visiting China on one of her adventures)
Suzie (pictured) managed to save £30,000 and her parents decided to lend her the rest of the funds for pilot school (pictured, learning to be a pilot)
Suzie who worked for British Airways, handed in her notice and returned to the UK to begin raising the £120,000 required to go through pilot school.
It wasn’t long before she had managed to save £30,000 and her parents decided to lend her the rest of the cash so she could pursue her dream.
In February 2019 the ambitious former air stewardess started the process of applying to study the profession with Flybe.
The process involved undertaking several interviews, aptitude, personality and spatial awareness tests as well as physics and maths exams.
Suzie (pictured) began the process of applying to study to become a pilot in February 2019, having to complete several interviews and a series of exams
After Flybe went bust in March, she began studying at FTEJerez flight school in Jerez, Spain, (pictured)
But Europe’s biggest regional airline FlyBe collapsed at the beginning of March with 2,000 staff losing their jobs.
The determined Suzie decided to continue her studies at FTEJerez flight school in Jerez, Spain, without any airline backing.
She now has just 20 hours of solo flying left to complete before she will be given her full ATPL in November.
Suzie said: ‘When I was with an air hostess I would do the passenger announcements and then listen to the pilots being able to tell the passengers that they were the ones that had flown them safely to the destination.
Suzie (pictured) is set to be given her full ATPL in November, after completing 20 hours of solo flying
‘As a pilot you get to look out of the windows and see all these beautiful views.
‘But the biggest thing is being able to feel like you’ve succeeded in safely carrying people.
‘You might have flown them thousands of miles in the space of a few hours taking them somewhere that they might never have been before or back home after years of not seeing family and friends.’
She added: ”I look back and think how weird it is that I was serving people their meals and now I’m flying planes around.’
Suzie (pictured) said she looks back and now finds it strange that she has gone from serving meals to flying people around
Suzie said you might have flown someone somewhere that they’ve never been, or taken them back home after spending years away
After quitting her role for British Airways, Suzie (pictured) returned home where she was able to work towards saving for her pilot training