Disagree. This is TUG, we can be better than "other" online forums. We just have to choose to be better.Nice try but probably in vain, unfortunately it's become the norm for most online forums.
Or a moderator will help us, gratefully.
Disagree. This is TUG, we can be better than "other" online forums. We just have to choose to be better.Nice try but probably in vain, unfortunately it's become the norm for most online forums.
Disagree. This is TUG, we can be better than "other" online forums. We just have to choose to be better.
Or a moderator will help us, gratefully.
1) Still breathingYou've been a member here since 2009, hope you're not holding your breath waiting for change.

I'm with your husband. I would have said something. I try to be considerate of those squeezed into the can with me, and expect a modicum of consideration from others. Too bad they won't let you carry lysol onboard.
I believe aerosol cans are now prohibited on planes!?I have tiny (about 1.5 or 2 inches high) cans of aerosol air fresheners that I found at our dollar store. They come in many different aromas. They fit neatly into my purse or toiletries bag & I have used them in public restrooms more than once. I have taken it in my quart bag on flights but thankfully have never had to use it!
~Diane
I believe aerosol cans are now prohibited on planes!?
Yeah, but they probably don't even notice a mini air freshener in someone's purse.
Not speaking up in uncomfortable situations and just "riding it out" is pretty much true of most situations, not just plane rides. Unless you are sweating buckets or flailing about in distress, nobody will care about your discomfort but you.If we've learned NOTHING on this subject after over 110 posts, I think we can all agree that if you don't say something AT THE TIME your space is being compromised, the airline can't do anything to remedy the situation. You can push the call button for a flight attendant, you can inject some humor into it (best John Wayne accent: "Mister, this here seat ain't big enough for the two of us.") But the worst thing you can do if you expect some remediation is to sit silently and suffer. THE AIRLINE WILL LET YOU!
Jim
Just talked to a friend last night who was on a recent Delta flight, middle seat, with a larger person window seat and and a huge person flowing into her space had the aisle . She had no arm rest either side. She called after the flight to c/o and got told she should of spoke up and told they would of put her on another flight. They gave her some air miles to compensate. She couldn't understand why they would not put the person who was taking up some of her space on another flight rather then her.
Just talked to a friend last night who was on a recent Delta flight, middle seat, with a larger person window seat and and a huge person flowing into her space had the aisle . She had no arm rest either side. She called after the flight to c/o and got told she should of spoke up and told they would of put her on another flight. They gave her some air miles to compensate. She couldn't understand why they would not put the person who was taking up some of her space on another flight rather then her.
BTW, I think "old people" shouldn't get to sit in the exit row. On our way to Hawaii last month I'm looking across the exit row we were sitting in to a woman that had to be at least 75 (I'm 61, I compared her wrinkles to mine). She might very well be able to open that door and move much more quickly than I, but there ought to be an age cut off. In fact we shouldn't have been sitting there with Cliff being two months shy of 79 -- the airline doesn't know that he regularly carries 50 pound boxes of blinds in our business. I think there should be an age cut off for the exit row to relieve the flight attendant from having to make a visual determination.
Aroma migraines are the worst! Hate those and they are a bear to get rid of because that aroma memory gets stuck in your olfactory system. Ditto to insisting on a move because of an intense aroma due to cologne masking.Common courtesies cost nothing. When I have an aisle or window seat I always let the person in the middle seat have the armrest between us! When I sit in the middle if the armrest is offered to me by my fellow passengers on either side then I take turns, only using it for half of the flight. Sometimes the person in the window seat is leaning against the window sleeping for the greater part of the flight in which case I feel free to use that armrest for as long as they are sleeping leaving the armrest on my other side open. Upon occasion I've been seated next to men who although not fat are big guys through the chest and shoulders. I've sat through 2.5 hour flights with my arms crossed over my middle and had no chance of using the armrest but it wasn't a big deal. Once I'm settled in my seat with my noise cancelling headphones, my neck pillow and my book, I'm good. I'm less understanding when someone takes the whole armrest for the entire flight not out of actual need but just because they are inconsiderate.
When I have the middle or aisle seat I tell the other people in my row not to hesitate to wake me if they need to use the restroom or stretch as I usually fall asleep quite easily on the planes and don't even have to be tired. I say that I'm always happy for the chance to stand up and stretch so they are not inconveniencing me in the slightest. IMO it is just so rude to make anyone feel bad for having to ask to use the restroom.
I will insist on moving seats right away before the flight takes off if someone around me has bathed in perfume or cologne. I don't need a migraine!