Aerophobia Test: What If Your Fear of Flying Isn't About the Plane at All?

Article | Fears and phobias

The sky calls to us with the promise of distant lands and swift passage, yet for many, it whispers a tale of fear. This intense, often paralyzing fear of flying is known as aerophobia. It's a concern that seems to be growing, even as air travel becomes statistically safer every year. But what if the object of our terror—the airplane itself—is merely a stage for a much deeper, older fear?

The Paradox of Safety

To understand aerophobia, we often start with a simple question: Imagine the same airplane was a bus, driving on a road. Would you be afraid to be inside it? The majority of people answer "no." This reveals a crucial insight: the fear is not typically of the vehicle, but of the environment—the vast, unforgiving height. The core of the phobia is the terror of falling, of crashing, of a complete loss of control.

This is why logical arguments and safety statistics, however compelling, often fail to soothe the aerophobic mind. The primal fear of death, which sits at the heart of any phobia, is far more powerful than numbers on a page. So, why does this fear persist so strongly?

Consider the role of media. Every aviation incident, precisely because it is so rare, becomes a global event broadcast across every screen. It's an anomaly, and we are wired to pay attention to anomalies. Now, imagine if every car accident received the same international coverage. Our screens would be filled with a constant, 24-hour stream of wreckage. It's safe to say that very few of us would ever want to get behind the wheel of a car again. Yet, because reports of car accidents are typically local and infrequent, we confidently step into our vehicles—or even into a taxi with a complete stranger—every single day. We don't have a widespread "car phobia," even though a single trip by car is statistically far more dangerous than a single flight.

How Deep Does the Fear Go? A Self-Assessment

You can gauge your own level of anxiety with a few short questions. Answer honestly and add up your points.

  1. Do you agree with the statement: "If you want something done right, you have to do it yourself"?
    • Yes (3 points)
    • I don't know (2 points)
    • No (1 point)
  2. Would you take a 10-hour train journey if you could fly to the same destination in 1 hour for the same price?
    • Yes (3 points)
    • I don't know (2 points)
    • No (1 point)
  3. Have you or someone close to you ever been involved in an aviation-related incident?
    • Yes (3 points)
    • I don't know (2 points)
    • No (1 point)
  4. Do you dislike amusement park rides and generally feel uncomfortable with heights?
    • Yes (3 points)
    • I don't know (2 points)
    • No (1 point)
  5. Have you flown on a plane once and had a very negative experience?
    • Yes (3 points)
    • I don't know (2 points)
    • No (1 point)
  6. Do you believe that because planes sometimes crash, it is fundamentally a dangerous mode of transport, and you would refuse regular flights even if your career depended on it?
    • Yes (3 points)
    • I don't know (2 points)
    • No (1 point)

Results:

  • 1-11 Points: You have little to no aerophobia. You likely fly with ease and enjoyment.
  • 12-16 Points: You experience some anxiety during flights but can manage it without panic. You will fly if necessary, though perhaps without much enthusiasm.
  • 17-21 Points: This indicates a significant level of aerophobia. For you, flying is a source of major stress, and you might refuse to fly even when it negatively impacts your life.

Tracing Fear to Its Source

Phobias are rarely born in a single, isolated moment. More often, they are the final link in a chain of experiences, with a root cause that can be surprisingly distant from the phobia itself.

Consider the case of a 19-year-old man who sought help for a frantic, overwhelming fear of flying. Through hypnotherapy and age regression, we looked for the origin of this powerful feeling of fear. The trail first led back to age fourteen, when he suffered a panic attack on a roller coaster. He felt terrified and physically ill.

Regressing further with that same feeling, we arrived at a memory from when he was four years old. His father was holding him, and he accidentally dropped him. The fall was short, but for a small child, it was a moment of painful shock and terror.

The chain went deeper still. The feeling was traced back to a time before he was even born, to a moment in his mother's womb when she slipped and fell. In that instant, he experienced his mother's fear and a sensation of suffocation. This was the origin point—the first trauma in the chain. By addressing and neutralizing this root cause through hypnotherapy, the entire sequence of psychotrauma unraveled. The aerophobia vanished, and his general fear of heights was significantly reduced. He could finally fly with pleasure.

This shows that all phobias, despite the intense fear they create, can often be resolved. The key is to understand that the trigger—the airplane, the spider, the enclosed space—is often not the real source of the fear at all.