About me
About Me
My name is Abdollah Mohammadpour and my work is grounded in both professional aviation and applied psychology.
Credentials & Professional Background
Bachelor’s degree in Psychology
Focused on relationship satisfaction and interpersonal dynamics.
Master’s degree in Psychology
Specialized in pilot mental health and the psychological demands of aviation.
Certified Nutritionist
With practical experience in performance-focused nutrition, training, and health optimization.
Flight Instructor
Instructor ratings covering PPL, IR, CPL, ATPL, and FI+, with several years of instructional experience.
Former Chief Flight Instructor
Responsible for training oversight, evaluation, and maintaining instructional standards.
Commercial Airline Pilot
Actively operating in passenger transport under real operational and evaluative pressure.
ICAO English Language Proficiency Examiner
Working at the intersection of communication, cognition, and performance under assessment.
Certified Life Coach (EMCC framework)
Trained in structured, ethical, and evidence-based coaching practice.
Perspective & Purpose
Throughout my years in aviation, I have seen many students and pilots struggle—not because of lack of ability, but because of uncertainty and pressure.
As a flight instructor, I worked with students who felt lost in their training: unsure about planning, unclear about progression, and overwhelmed by the structure and expectations placed on them. Later, in airline operations, I consistently encountered another challenge—capable pilots who were hesitant or fearful of engaging with psychological support.
That hesitation was rarely about psychology itself. It was about being misunderstood.
Aviation operates under unique demands: continuous evaluation, responsibility, hierarchy, and real-world consequences. Many pilots fear that opening up may lead to misinterpretation, unnecessary labeling, or professional risk. I recognized early on that this gap—between psychology and aviation reality—needed to be addressed from within the profession.
My goal became clear: to work as a psychologist and coach for pilots who truly understands their environment, concerns, and constraints.
I deliberately aligned my academic training in psychology with my operational experience in aviation to support aviators in a way that is realistic, respectful, and grounded in their lived experience. My work is focused on reducing unnecessary friction in pilots’ lives—whether in training, career progression, performance under pressure, relationships, or personal regulation—while fully respecting the demands of the profession.
How I Work
I work privately and one-to-one.
Sessions are structured, focused, and confidential. We address real situations, real decisions, and real pressure—without abstraction or unnecessary theory. The aim is clarity, regulation, and decision-making that holds under operational conditions.
This is not therapy, and it is not generic coaching. It is a disciplined space for thinking clearly and operating effectively in high-responsibility environments.
Who This Is For
My work is best suited for individuals who:
operate in high-stakes or evaluative environments
value precision over reassurance
prefer clarity to motivation
and take responsibility for their own development
If you are looking for surface-level advice or quick fixes, this is likely not the right fit. If you are looking for grounded, informed work that respects the realities of aviation and performance, we may work well together.