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The Not-So Family-Friendly Skies

Jay Jay the Jet Plane

Jay Jay the Jet Plane (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

I remember my first flight. I was eight and had to wear a dress for the occasion—albeit a handmade one with a matching headscarf. It was the 70s. Our destination? Cartagena, Colombia. (This was before prostitutes and the Secret Service gave the lovely seaside resort city a bad name.)

Flying used to be a thrill all on its own. An adventure. Now the airlines are about to make it one again. For unsuspecting passengers in those window and aisle seats.

The first time my son flew was when he was two; we were moving from Baltimore to our then-new hometown of Birmingham, Ala. (We’ve since relocated again). My husband had traveled ahead of us.

A few times, like that initial flight to Birmingham, I’ve been stuck flying with our kid(s) without my husband to help. When my son was four and my daughter two, the three of us flew back to Baltimore for a visit. I booked the tickets last-minute and couldn’t get our seats together; we were all stuck with dreaded middle seats a few rows apart. The ticket agent said not to worry, they’d take care of it at the gate.

They did not take care of it at the gate.

They told me not to worry, a flight attendant would take care of it once all had boarded the plane.

He made an announcement. No one volunteered to trade seats with us.

I settled my two-year-old with her blankie in her seat. I settled my four-year-old with his stuffed bunny in his seat. I shot a pleading look to the flight attendant, who shrugged his shoulders. So I took my seat, looked at the man to my left and the woman to my right and said, “Let the crying begin.”

The crying began.

I stood up and walked down to my daughter and told her it would be okay. Then I told the people in the window and aisle seats next to her that I was sorry, and that hopefully she would fall asleep in an hour or so. I told my son to enjoy the flight.  (He was jabbering away, but not crying. Not yet.)

The flight attendant became desperate. He got on the PA speaker and said, “People! Do you hear that poor child crying?!” He offered free drinks. Free movie tickets. Free snacks. Finally, two takers. They were parents, traveling without kids. I don’t know whether they acted out of guilt, or empathy, or if they just didn’t want to hear the annoying sound of my daughter crying for two and a half hours.

Last week several U.S. airlines announced that they’re planning to charge extra for window and aisle seats beginning this summer. So families trying to book seats together will have to pay hefty surcharges–upwards of $30 per premium seat each way, or $180 for a family of four traveling round-trip (with one member sitting across the aisle). Otherwise, it’s all middle seats for them.

But no worries. Airlines assure families who can’t get the upgrades that they’ll be “taken care of” at the gate.

Yeah, I’ve heard that before.

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About The Parenting Gig

For nearly two decades, Leslie has worked as a communications specialist. Since 2006, she has served as the editor of a regional parenting publication, for which she received the Parenting Media Association's Gold and Silver Awards for Overall Writing in 2010, 2011 and 2013. Follow her blog at http://theparentinggig.com.

8 Responses to The Not-So Family-Friendly Skies

  1. How stressful! The airlines just get worse and worse.

    • Leslie P.

      Ridiculous, right? What I encountered was bad enough, but whatever, I purchased tickets last-minute. To think they’re now planning to have all families deal w/this unless they cough up the big bucks?? Disgusting!

      • Here in Canada, they just started forcing airlines to include all the surcharges in their advertising. Before, they would advertise say, “$250 to Vancouver” but the real price would be closer to $700 because of all the extra costs. I guess they just can’t afford to run anymore but they are gauging the wrong people.

  2. sillyliss

    Oh my word!! Why wouldn’t one of the people sitting next to the crying child offer to trade seats with the mother of the child? Was your seat in the cockpit or on the wing? How awful!

  3. Marusia

    The same happened with us… Thank God the other passengers were very sweet and let us change seats. Well, actually, I think they were sweet and wise, too, because we were flying from USA to Brazil… almost ten hours of crying, definitely it was not a good idea hahaha

    • Leslie P.

      The mere thought of a 10-hour flight with little tykes sends shivers down my spine! I might have been tempted to wait a few hours to reclaim my kids : )

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