Kids on a Plane

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Lifestyle

I expected that it would be an easy flight. I smiled as the family with young children slid into the seats behind us. Two children who were about three or four years old. The father sat in the middle of the three-seat row. The mother, and another child, sat in the same row on the other side of the aisle.

 

Shortly after takeoff, the kicking against the back of my seat started. I tried to ignore it. I thought that it would stop as soon as they became occupied with something else. I thought about my children at that age.

 

The kicking persisted. Finally, I turned around and made eye contact with the father. He knew why I turned around. I thought that non-verbal interchange would suffice. It was about a half-hour of relief before the kicking resumed. Try to ignore it.

 

Meanwhile, on the other side of the aisle, the child is also kicking the seat in front. I exchanged glances with my fellow victim. He finally turned to the father and had words. Something to the effect of “Please control your children.”  The father gave a shrug of helplessness. (If not him, who?)

 

The coup de grace came as the plane descended to land. The pressure must have been too much for the childrens’ ears. One started to cry and the other -- not to be outdone -- started to scream. Soon all the children in our section joined in the chorus.

 

I like kids. Really. And I firmly believe that parents should be able to take their children on airplanes. But should it be at the detriment of fellow passengers?

Comments

Cayce Crown

Unfortunately, the kicking is just a symptom of how the children are being raised and that makes me sad for them. I would have had stronger, earlier words with Mom and Dad.
Cynthia Somma

My kids learned early on about kicking in the car....forget about a plane.
Funny story---Emily has been my flying companion since she was six months old. She is a pro---has the process down like no other. We fly at least twice a year. When she was around four we had our first (and last) connecting flight. On the second flight she decided she was tired of sitting. I tried everything, short of folding her legs and sitting on her. I am forever grateful to a wonderful staff that just "got it" and to fellow passengers that were spared something truly out of my control. It was a 45 min flight and she stood next to me. I laugh now, then it was not funny. Kicking can be controlled, strong wills---maybe not so much.

Submitted by NULL (not verified) on Wed, 01/21/2015 - 22:37

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Donna Levine wrote
"kicking is just a symptom of how the children are being raised"???? REALLY your kidding right? Small children no matter how they are raised are not meant to be confined to a seat and a small space for endless hours. I don't like to sit in one place for a flight, its unhealthy and not natural to sit still for a long period of time. Perhaps the parents could try to fly at night when their kids are more likely to sleep but just like in restaurant sometimes you have to be tolerant and understanding.

Submitted by Phyllis_Newbert on Thu, 01/22/2015 - 04:17

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Phyllis Newbert

I was on a flight to Florida a few years ago and a young mother with a toddler and an infant sat across from me. The toddler was a handful and the infant kept crying. I was able to get up and asked the mom if I could walk with the baby. I walked up and down the aisle and got the baby to sleep. The grateful looks from some of the passengers was amusing. Thankfully, it was a calm flight that allowed me to be out of my seat. Otherwise....sedation would have been the only answer...either for me or those children!

Submitted by Erik_Scheibe on Thu, 01/22/2015 - 17:03

In reply to by Phyllis_Newbert

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Erik Scheibe

A fantastic comment and story

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