Imagine that the narrator of the story ‘Black Aeroplane “ shared his story with friends and
family once he got home. One of them, a spiritual leader, decided to incorporate the story as part
of his weekly sermon to the congregation. Another friend, a psychologist, worked the story into
his next lecture on survival instinct and crisis management. Do you think the two interpretations
of the story would be different? If so, how? What insights might the narrator get about his
mysterious experience, if he were to attend both the sessions?
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Everything was going well — it was an easy flight. Paris was about 150 kilometers behind me when I saw the clouds. Storm clouds. They were huge. They looked like black mountains
standing in front of me across the sky. I knew I could not fly up and over them, and I did not
have enough fuel to fly around them to the north or south. “I ought to go back to Paris,” I thought, but I wanted to get home. I wanted that breakfast. ‘I’ll take the risk,’ I thought and flew that old Dakota straight into the storm.
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