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Meet the World’s First Deaf Instrument Rated Pilot

December 31, 2009 By: av8er Category: Aviation Videos, Flying Stories, Important Aviation Personalities, Learn To Fly, Private Pilot, Videos


This New Year’s eve I would like to introduce my readers to the World’s First Deaf Instrument Rated Pilot, Stephen Hopson. You might have read his post about his Flight Instructor who gave selflessly, if not please do so (pilots are from out of this world, just a different breed). Stephen, who is deaf since birth, is a Private Pilot with an Instrument Rating, a Charles Schwab Stock Broker and an Inspirational Speaker of great magnitude!

Adversity does not discriminate – Stephen Hopson

Becoming an airline pilot, is usually not an easy path (with some lucky exceptional cases). There are always a lot of obstacles on the way; and some give up, while the others keep pushing and trying, and never give up until they achieve that goal. I have the honor of knowing many such determined pilots, the pilots who never accepted the “fate” and the stronger the resistance, the stronger their desire became to make it.

Stephen is one of them. Do you know how a deaf person can hear an airplane takeoff? Well, I didn’t until I saw this video of Stephen explaining how. I am still amazed at the fact that a deaf since birth person can learn how to talk, and he shows us how he can hear the airplanes takeoff!

And then to top it off, he even became the first deaf pilot to get an Instrument Rating! For those who are not familiar with the term Instrument Rating; it means flying an airplane in the clouds by reference to only the airplane instruments. In my career as a flight instructor for over a decade, I know that instrument rating is in fact the hardest pilot rating to obtain. Stephen got it because he was told that he can not have it.

Now I can fly both Blind and Deaf – Stephen Hopson, upon getting his IR

His stock broker career also began on a similar note. The tougher the circumstances, more the determination. And this is what I wanted to share with all of us today – the year 2009 may not have been the best for a lot of us, but we need to get prepared for the 2010. Many pilots lost their jobs, or were put on furloughs, many recently certified Commercial Pilots who were hoping to get hired and all of a sudden found themselves with no job and a huge student loan to pay, many flight instructors ended up working for minimum wages as their flight schools shut down. But then, this is our adversity, and our chance to conquer the fate.

May 2010 be a better year for all. Happy New Year.

Stephen writes on his blog at http://adversityuniversityblog.com.

There are scholarships available for physically disabled or handicapped individuals who want to become pilots. There are other Scholarships, Grants and Student Loans available as well, and then there is Federal Aid for Flight Training.


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4 Comments to “Meet the World’s First Deaf Instrument Rated Pilot”


  1. Now I wonder, who is going to be the World's FIRST Deaf Commercial Pilot and a Flight Instructor?

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  2. Years ago I had the privilege of instructing what the other flight instructors called "problem students", mostly aspiring pilots who were older and took more time to learn. Teaching them was not difficult, just required patience, confidence building, encouragement and the gift of time.

    I am glad I had the change to teach them, and I think the instructor for Stephen Hopson got a gift he didn't expect.

    John {JetAviator7}

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    • John, you are right about teaching people with "limitations", physically or in other ways, being a privilege, fun, challenging and rewarding. A few years ago, I came across this private pilot, in his early 70s, who had both legs amputated, both above the knees, and he wanted to get his IR. I assigned him with a matching instructor, and he got his IR pretty quickly.
      He owned and trained in his own C-172. HIs new wife (mentally handicapped) would ride along on each training flight in the back seat. The couple would fly 100 nm one way to come pick up their instructor at our flight school.
      NOTE: He had lost his first wife and both his legs in an airplane crash a few years ago!

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  3. This is a very heartwarming post. So who said not everyone can fly?

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