All depends how they're ending the sentence. "Good enough to briefly be airborne is Good enough to briefly be airborne" vs "Good enough to fly through combat conditions safely is, in fact, good enough to fly through combat conditions safely"
My mom actually sat down and wanted to talk about how I complain that nothing i do ends up being as good as I want it to be a while back. She told me that things don't need to be perfect, and I should start thinking of it as "good enough", rather than as something that's flawed.
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