Karen Demands Single Mom Give Up Her Paid Seats, And The Flight Attendant's Intervention Changes Everything
As annoying as entitled people tend to be, most of the time we can just ignore them, make some excuse and walk away. However, if you’re unlucky enough to be stuck next to them, say, on a flight, it’s probably best to dig in one’s heels and fight.
A woman went online to vent about encountering an entitled mom on a plane who demanded that her daughter should take precedence over the other woman’s son because she wanted a window seat. Readers shared their thoughts and some folks shared their own encounters with entitled people like this.
The best way to get the seat you want, surprise surprise, is to pay for it
Image credits: photobac / Envato (not the actual photo)
So one woman was stunned when another passenger demanded her son’s seat
Image credits: joaquincorbalan / Envato (not the actual photo)
Image credits: dekddui1405 / Envato (not the actual photo)
Image credits: Iakobchuk / Envato (not the actual photo)
Image credits: MotherhoodEst2017
Air travel has enough issues as it is
Image credits: Joyce Romero / Unsplash (not the actual photo)
There’s something about air travel that seems to bring out a very specific brand of entitlement in certain parents, and this story is a near-perfect case study in how it unfolds. Before getting into the weeds on that, though, it’s worth giving credit where it’s due. The original poster handled a genuinely frustrating situation with more patience than most people would have managed. She bought two seats, had her boarding passes ready, and explained herself calmly more than once to someone who was not interested in listening. That takes composure.
Now, to the entitled behavior itself. The core of what made this woman’s demands so unreasonable was not just that she asked someone to move. Asking a fellow passenger to swap seats is something that happens on planes all the time, and it is usually no big deal. What crossed the line was the assumption that the request would be granted, the refusal to hear out a clear and reasonable explanation, and the escalation into screaming in a confined metal tube full of strangers while her own child watched. That is not advocating for your kid. That is using your kid as a justification for behavior you were already inclined toward.
There is a version of this situation where the entitled mom has a legitimate grievance, and it is worth exploring. Parents traveling with children, especially young ones, do face real logistical stress. Planes are cramped, kids are unpredictable, and the stakes feel high because a meltdown at 30,000 feet affects everyone around you. The desire to get a specific seat to keep your child comfortable and manageable is not irrational. A window seat can be a genuine lifesaver when you need something to keep a kid entertained. So the want itself was understandable.
The idea that a paid-for seat should be handed over for no reason is ludicrous
Image credits: Aleksei Zaitcev / Unsplash (not the actual photo)
What was not understandable was the entitlement layered on top of it. The entitled mom decided before she even heard the full sentence that she was right and everyone else was wrong. She interrupted, she yelled, she accused a young single mother of lying about having paid for a seat, and she was condescending every step of the way. She also chose to direct her frustration at a flight attendant who had nothing to do with the situation, and then later at an airport cleaning worker who definitely had nothing to do with the Burger King being closed at nearly midnight. That pattern matters because it suggests this was not a one-off stress response. This is how she moves through the world when she does not get what she wants.
The broader phenomenon here is one that a lot of frequent travelers will recognize. Some parents operate under the assumption that having a child makes their needs automatically superior to everyone else’s. Their child’s comfort becomes a trump card that overrides the reasonable expectations of ticketed passengers, service workers, and bystanders alike. And the frustrating thing is that this attitude actually makes things harder for parents who do travel thoughtfully. The original poster was one of those parents. She bought an extra seat specifically to be less of a burden on the people around her. She was already doing the considerate thing.
That consideration gets undermined when entitled parents behave as though the whole plane owes them accommodation simply for having reproduced. It feeds the stereotype that parents with young children are a nuisance, which then makes the experience harder for people who are genuinely trying to be respectful of others. The flight attendant deserved that compliment at the end of the flight. She read the situation clearly, handled it professionally, and absolutely earned the praise she got. And the fact that the little girl did end up with a window seat, just not that specific window seat, makes the whole tantrum seem even more pointless in hindsight. The outcome the mom claimed to want was always available. She just also wanted to win.
Readers shared their indignation at how the entitled woman behaved
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If someone took that tone of voice with me I'd just tell them to get lost and then ignore the rest. Also what happened to assigned seating in the US? Here you can either pick your own seat during online check in, or at the very latest you will get a seat assigned when you get your boarding pass. And that is where you sit, period.
Southwest used to have open seating. That changed at the beginning of this year.
Load More Replies...People really spend their time writing these fake stories for likes ? Wow.
I don't think "irrelevant" means what you think it means. I also think you are charmingly optimistic about this being an experience that doesn't happen, in fairly similar ways, to a LOT of people. Perhaps we can just let people tell their stories, and if it turns out to be boring to us, just shrug and move on?
Load More Replies...If someone took that tone of voice with me I'd just tell them to get lost and then ignore the rest. Also what happened to assigned seating in the US? Here you can either pick your own seat during online check in, or at the very latest you will get a seat assigned when you get your boarding pass. And that is where you sit, period.
Southwest used to have open seating. That changed at the beginning of this year.
Load More Replies...People really spend their time writing these fake stories for likes ? Wow.
I don't think "irrelevant" means what you think it means. I also think you are charmingly optimistic about this being an experience that doesn't happen, in fairly similar ways, to a LOT of people. Perhaps we can just let people tell their stories, and if it turns out to be boring to us, just shrug and move on?
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