Every retirement flight has a moment when the pilot realizes it’s the final one. The last pre-flight inspection. The final radio message to ground control. The final moment when the ground vanishes beneath the wheels. For Jim Curtis, that moment came with his daughter sitting in the right seat next to him — and by the time she finished speaking, he was trying to preserve his calm in front of a cabin full of passengers.
Captain Jim Curtis retired from Southwest Airlines after 22 years with the company, following 21 years of service in the U.S. Air Force. Combined, that’s more than four decades in the cockpit, which is the kind of statistic that stops you for a second when you actually think about it. Commercial airline pilots are required by the FAA’s obligatory retirement rule to retire at age 65. For Curtis, his 65th birthday signaled the end of a career that had carried him from military service to one of the most recognizable domestic carriers in the country.
The ceremony wasn’t what made the last flight unique. It was the copilot’s seat occupant. Julia Curtis, his daughter, serves as a first officer with Southwest – a career path she selected, in large part, because of seeing her father. She had privately dreamed for years that she may get the chance to fly with him on what the industry calls a “fini-flight.” When the opportunity arrived, she didn’t let it pass without saying something.
Her homage to him, presented during the trip and later posted to Southwest’s Instagram on June 21 in recognition of Father’s Day, circulated swiftly. Julia praised her father not just with pushing her to pursue aviation but with impacting the way she sees work and life more broadly. Long before she had ever sat in a cockpit, he had taught her two principles that she kept returning to: arrive with a cheerful attitude and put genuine effort into whatever you’re doing. She didn’t pretend it was more difficult than that.
Jim, for his part, admits the moment nearly got him. “I spent 30 years trying to have a stern profile,” he told Fox & Friends Weekend, where the two appeared together after the flight. “And people noticed my lip quivering, and so I was just lucky to be able to keep it together.” He called the experience “tremendous”—a term that certainly carries more weight than it might sound coming from someone who spent decades in both military and commercial aircraft.
There’s something in this story that aviation families will identify immediately — the way the job becomes part of how a family perceives the world, how a child watches a parent go to work and eventually decides to follow. That’s exactly what Julia said, detailing how she watched her father take off on flights as a child and what it meant to finally be sitting next to him on one. “To actually have the opportunity to sit there with him and also get to tell my greatest mentor in life how much he means to me was truly special,” she replied.

Jim is moving to a family property after retirement, where he and his wife want to produce walnuts. Planting something, caring for it, and watching it grow over time is a different kind of work than flying a Boeing 737 over the American southwest, but it requires a similar level of patience. The career of his daughter is still in its early stages. He appears to be most excited to watch that section.
