Following his dreams to the skies
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Marisa O’Neil
Most parents want to see their children spread their wings and fly.
Few get to do it literally.
Yesterday, Newport Harbor High School senior and Russian native
Edik Passmore made his first solo flight out of John Wayne Airport
after three months of training. His mother, Newport Beach resident
Susan Jordan-Passmore, said that he’s been fascinated with flying
ever since she and husband John Passmore adopted their son from a St.
Petersburg orphanage seven years ago.
“It’s been his dream, always, to be a pilot,” his mother said.
“Ever since his first flight from Russia, that’s what he’s wanted to
do.”
Thursday, he made his first step toward his dream of a pilot’s
license with three takeoffs and landings over Orange County.
“It was a bit scary doing the first landing all by myself,” he
said after his flights. “It was a bit windy and as you get lower the
winds move the plane around. The second time, it was easier and by
the third time I was fine.”
The soft-spoken Passmore started practicing on flight simulators
shortly after he came to the United States, just before his 11th
birthday. He plans to go to college when he graduates next year and
major in aviation and minor in Russian.
Ultimately, he wants to be an airline pilot.
“We’ve spent a lot of time working on his passions,”
Jordan-Passmore said. “From day one, he knew the names of cars and
planes, before he could even speak English. I’d look up and I could
barely even see the plane. My husband, who knows planes, would look
and say: ‘He’s right.’”
Edik Passmore, who just turned 18, didn’t speak a word of English
when he stepped on his first airplane and flew to America.
“I thought America was just one, big, happy place,” he said. “I
didn’t even know it had different states.”
Jordan-Passmore said that they not only had to get beyond the
language barrier with their son, but deal with the fact that he was
two years behind in school. She said that she studied a little
Russian and used charades to communicate with her son at first.
When he started school in fifth grade, he struggled so much that
his teacher gave him a shorter list of vocabulary words to learn.
After other students complained, his teacher wrote 10 Russian words on the board for them to learn so they could better appreciate
Passmore’s challenge.
For each night of homework, Jordan-Passmore said, she and her
husband would put in an extra four hours of studying with him so he
could catch up. She said that his dedication and abilities have
surpassed all her expectations.
“It wasn’t until after three weeks or so that it came up that he
was born in Russia,” his flight instructor, Veronica Saldivar at
Sunrise Aviation, said. “I never would have guessed. I’ve been very
impressed with his ability to learn and cope with all the data.”
Passmore carries a 3.44 grade-point average, is enrolled in
advanced placement classes and studies Russian language in addition
to his flying lessons.
“In his classes he knows what hard work means,” Angela Newman, his
teacher in a Newport Harbor college preparation class said. “He
probably needs to study more than other students, but he’s willing to
put in that extra work in order to do well.”
* MARISA O’NEIL covers education and may be reached at (949)
574-4268 or by e-mail at [email protected].
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