Profile picture of Catherine Aygen
Catherine Aygen
Consultante Formatrice & Coach en Prise de Parole en Anglais | Dirigeante d’A Star Formation (Qualiopi) | Top 3 européen de discours improvisé | Appli IA d’analyse de discours
Follow me
Generated by linktime
January 2, 2021
Happy New Year and Bonne Année to everyone! I hope 2021 brings you many good things, especially health and happiness 🤩 I know 2020 was a challenging year for all of us, for some more than others. For me, 2020 was a year that made me feel grateful for many things: to be living on the Côte d'Azur, close to nature, and that my children are old enough not to need constant supervision, but not quite teenagers yet. I was also extremely lucky to have a husband who did the homeschooling while I worked! My business was already online so in this sense I was very fortunate. It was easy to rework all of our training offers to make them into effective virtual programmes and although I think we all miss real human interaction, we can still have human contact and create relationships through a screen. Of course there were plenty of downsides to the year: not being able to see my friends and family in the UK was very hard and 2020 ended with a big down: Brexit 😖 Let's hope that 2021 doesn't throw as many surprises at us as 2020, and that we can soon get back to "normal" life, whatever that is! Good luck everyone! #bonneannée #happynewyear #goodbye2020
Stay updated
Subscribe to receive my future LinkedIn posts in your mailbox.

By clicking "Subscribe", you agree to receive emails from linktime.co.
You can unsubscribe at any time.

January 2, 2021
Last week I had one of the scariest experiences of my life. I was flying back from Amsterdam to Nice after the Toastmasters international conference. Everything was as usual, until the pilot announced, “We’re going back to Amsterdam.” Everyone in the plane groaned. But then he added, “There’s an electrical fault which has affected the brakes and we don’t know if the back up braking system has been affected or not. We need to go back to Amsterdam to land on the longest runway possible. The crew will now prepare you for an emergency landing in 30 minutes.” The worst thing was that I could hear in the pilot’s voice that he was stressed. I looked at the crew’s faces and although they were calm, their faces showed that they were scared. The next 30 minutes were spent practising the brace position, removing all jewellery, glasses, tightening our seatbelts, learning how to open the emergency doors. We were told to study the safety card, which everyone did more intently than ever before! And like most of the other people on the plane, I was quietly worrying that we’d crash at the end of the runway and perhaps this was how I was going to die. We landed in brace position, with the crew shouting “brace for landing”. Luckily the emergency brakes worked 😅 If you’re expecting me to tell you that I have now changed my life for the better and I’m giving everything up to become a life coach… …I’m not 😆 I did say to myself, “Only trains from now on”, but I still had to get home and that involved two flights the next day. What I did realise was sometimes you have to give up control and put yourself in the hands of people who are trained for this. Also that after we landed, all the passengers were talking to each other, everyone was friendly and helpful. And when I saw some of my fellow passengers the next day, it’s like we were friends, bonded by this experience. And that made me think, why can’t we always create these human connections, even when we’re not in such an emotionally charged situation? So that is my resolution from this experience: make more human connections with everyone around me. (Photo taken from my flight home the next day: I’ve never been so happy to see the Îles Lerins 😁)
50 comments
May 19, 2025