Nuggets for Nuggets: Proving vs. Improving
One of the most important questions a young aviator can ask is this:
Are you trying to prove yourself, or improve yourself?
Many of us begin our careers focused on proving that we belong. We want the instructor to think we’re sharp. We want the crew to think we’re competent. We want to avoid mistakes, avoid embarrassment, and avoid exposing our weaknesses.
But that mindset has a ceiling.
Psychologist Carol Dweck popularized the concept of the “growth mindset”—the understanding that our abilities are not fixed traits but skills that can be developed through deliberate effort, coaching, and experience. The idea is simple but powerful: your current level of performance is not your permanent level of performance.
The professional aviators who continue to grow throughout their careers understand this instinctively.
When they struggle with a maneuver or flight regime, they don’t avoid it. They seek it out.
When they make a mistake, they don’t defend it. They dissect it.
When they receive criticism, they don’t view it as an attack on their identity. They view it as information.
This distinction becomes obvious during training.
Are you focused on merely passing the check ride, or are you trying to master the skills the check ride was designed to evaluate?
There is a difference.
One pilot studies for the test so they can survive the event.
Another studies until they understand how every maneuver and procedure relates to operational scenarios and can make them more effective in the aircraft.
One pilot avoids the maneuvers that expose weaknesses.
Another intentionally requests them.
One hopes those maneuvers don’t appear on the next flight.
The other works to make sure they do.
The first pilot is protecting their ego.
The second pilot is building their capability.
Every aviator eventually discovers that weakness concealed is weakness preserved. The only way to eliminate a deficiency is to expose it to scrutiny, coaching, repetition, and honest self-assessment.
The irony is that the experienced pilots most respected by their peers are rarely the ones who never struggled as junior aviators. They are the ones who were unafraid to admit where they needed work and willing to put in the effort to improve.
Aviation has a way of humbling all of us. The aircraft, the environment, and the mission do not care about our confidence, our reputation, or our previous successes. They respond only to skill, judgment, and discipline applied moment by moment.
So the next time you’re heading into a simulator session, a training flight, or a check ride, ask yourself:
Am I trying to prove what I already know?
Or am I trying to become something better?
One path protects your current image.
The other builds the aviator you are capable of becoming.
In the long run, those who focus on becoming eventually outperform those focused on proving.
