Bharosa Neuropsychiatry Hospital

Fear of Flying — Why It Gets Worse With Age and How to Fix It | Bharosa

He used to fly without a second thought. Business trips to Mumbai. Family trips to Singapore. A honeymoon to Europe. He has probably taken 200 flights in his life without incident. Last year, he flew from Hyderabad to Delhi for a meeting. The flight had mild turbulence for about 10 minutes. Nothing unusual. The flight landed safely. He got off shaken but otherwise fine. Then the next time he had to fly, 3 months later, he could not sleep the night before. He took two tranquilisers before the flight. The flight itself was agony. Every small bump made him certain the plane was going down. He arrived at his destination exhausted and resolved never to fly again. He is now 48 years old, and he is turning down opportunities — family vacations, business trips, weddings in other cities — because he has developed a fear of flying that he never had before. This is one of the most common patterns we see. Fear of flying often gets worse with age, not better — and most people do not understand why.

If fear of flying has started costing you opportunities, please read this blog. At Bharosa Neuro Psychiatry Hospitals, Plot No. 114, Mythripuram, Karmanghat, Opposite TKR College Comman (TKR Kamaan), Main Road, LB Nagar / Karmanghat, Hyderabad – 500079, Telangana, we treat aviophobia regularly. These 4 reasons explain why the problem often emerges or intensifies in midlife and beyond — and the treatment that actually works, not just tranquilisers before takeoff.

Why Fear of Flying Is Particularly Responsive to Proper Treatment

The American Psychiatric Association (https://www.psychiatry.org) classifies fear of flying as a specific phobia that responds well to structured treatment. The American Psychological Association (https://www.apa.org) has published evidence that cognitive behavioural approaches combined with graded exposure produce strong outcomes. Harvard Medical School (https://www.health.harvard.edu) has documented that fear of flying often becomes more entrenched when managed purely with sedating medication and avoidance — but resolves well when treated with evidence-based therapy.

Reason 1 — Fear of Flying Worsens Because You Think More About Mortality With Age

In your 20s and 30s, a plane ride felt routine. In your 40s and 50s, existential awareness deepens. You know more people who have died. You have children who depend on you. You think about what could happen in ways you did not before. A bump on the flight is now filtered through a heightened awareness that life can end suddenly. This is a normal developmental shift, and it makes the nervous system more primed to code ambiguous sensations as threats. Fear of flying often appears or intensifies during this life phase for exactly this reason.

Reason 2 — Fear of Flying Worsens Because One Bad Experience Rewires the Response

A single episode of moderate turbulence, a medical event on a flight, or a flight with an emergency landing can permanently change how your nervous system codes flying. The brain tags the environment as dangerous and activates threat response on every subsequent flight. This can happen after decades of comfortable flying. Once established, this conditioning does not fade with more flights — it typically grows stronger, especially if you rely on avoidance or sedation to get through each flight.

Reason 3 — Fear of Flying Worsens Because News and Media Reinforce Danger Perception

Every aviation incident is covered intensely. Crashes that happen once in hundreds of thousands of flights dominate news cycles for weeks. Your brain weighs these vivid images more heavily than statistical reality. The more attention you pay to aviation news, the more your fear intensifies. In an earlier era, this information simply was not available in this quantity. Today, the constant drip of vivid threat content trains the anxious brain to see flying as increasingly dangerous even though air travel is safer than ever.

Reason 4 — Fear of Flying Worsens Because Tranquilisers Do Not Actually Help Long-Term

Many people with fear of flying manage by taking a sedative before the flight. It works in the short term. But it teaches the brain that flying is only survivable with medication. Over years, the dose often escalates, the fear between flights worsens, and the person becomes dependent on the medication approach while the underlying phobia gets worse. This pattern is extremely common and is one of the main reasons fear of flying often intensifies rather than fading across midlife.

How Fear of Flying Is Actually Fixed

Cognitive Behavioural Therapy specifically designed for fear of flying is the gold standard. It includes understanding the nervous system response, accurate information about flight safety and turbulence, techniques for managing physical anxiety, and graded exposure — often using video simulations and eventually real flights with a structured support plan. Many programmes include specific psychoeducation about how planes actually work, because much of the fear is driven by inaccurate mental models. Medication is sometimes used strategically for initial exposure, but treatment aims at long-term resolution, not permanent dependence on tranquilisers. Research shows that properly treated patients often return to flying comfortably — sometimes even enjoying it again — within months.

How Bharosa Treats Fear of Flying With the 90-Day Programme

At Bharosa, we treat this with our dedicated 90-Day Personalised Recovery Programme — a structured, medically supervised plan that is built around you, not a generic template. Every patient gets their own psychiatrist, their own therapist, their own medication plan, and their own recovery roadmap. No two patients at Bharosa follow the same programme, because no two people have the same story.

For patients with fear of flying, our 90-Day Programme at Plot No. 114, Mythripuram, Karmanghat, Opposite TKR College Comman (TKR Kamaan), Main Road, LB Nagar / Karmanghat, Hyderabad – 500079, Telangana provides structured treatment. Our consultant MD Psychiatrists (/best-psychiatrist-hyderabad-depression) assess for underlying anxiety disorders that may be amplifying the phobia. Our clinical psychologists deliver structured Cognitive Behavioural Therapy (/cbt-therapy-hyderabad-bharosa) specifically adapted for aviophobia, including psychoeducation about turbulence, aircraft design, and flight safety statistics. Medication (/anxiety-treatment-hyderabad-bharosa) is prescribed strategically when useful, but not as a permanent substitute for treatment. We help you plan upcoming flights and support you through the gradual re-exposure.

We have treated patients at our Karmanghat, LB Nagar, Hyderabad facility (/mental-health-hospital-in-hyderabad) from across Hyderabad — LB Nagar, Karmanghat, Dilsukhnagar, Vanasthalipuram, Nagole, Uppal, Hayathnagar, Secunderabad, Kukatpally, Gachibowli, Mehdipatnam — who had stopped flying for years. Business professionals, parents who needed to visit overseas children, couples who wanted to travel again. Many of them are flying comfortably now. Call +91 95050 58886.

Frequently Asked Questions

Q: Is fear of flying a real phobia?

A: Yes. Aviophobia is a recognised specific phobia that responds very well to evidence-based treatment.

Q: How long does treatment take?

A: Most patients see significant improvement within 8 to 12 sessions in our 90-Day Programme.

Q: Should I just take tranquilisers before flights?

A: They help short-term but do not resolve the underlying phobia and often worsen it over time. Treatment actually fixes the problem.

Q: Will I have to fly during treatment?

A: Graded exposure is part of treatment, but paced to what you can handle. Early sessions use simulation and imagery.

Q: Where is Bharosa?

A: Karmanghat, Opp TKR College, LB Nagar, Hyderabad – 500079. Call +91 95050 58886

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