lifestyle

Should business class be banned for kids?

 

 

 

The back of the plane is a desperate place. Noisy. Stuffy. And full of parents and fractious children who can’t watch another nano-second of Toy Story 1, 2 or 3.

Been there? Banging cups, sucking ice, looking at clouds. And then another parent drags their child up the aisle and it’s time to tag out. Back to your seat. Back to the ‘look’s.

One of those ‘looks’ might come from Fairfax’s Lee Tulloch who says, “I hate myself for this, but whenever I find myself seated in close proximity to an infant on a plane, especially on a long-haul flight, my heart sinks. It’s worse if I’m seated in the business or first-class cabins because I’ve been looking forward to the possibility of a peaceful flight with lots of sleep.”

And with that, she asks, “Should children be banned from business class?”

Tulloch says, “I once flew first class from Sydney to Asia seated across the aisle from a colicky baby who would not settle during the entire flight…. Some people would like to see this mother banned from sitting in the comfortable seats, arguing that noisy babies and children don’t belong where passengers might be doing business or trying to get some rest before an important meeting, or where they have paid a premium for the privilege of not sitting in the scrum that is economy class.”

Oh please. That’s life. Like, real life. Babies have collic. Toddlers throw wobblies. Kids get tired and cranky. Deal with it. If you want to be immune from the WORLD, buy your own jet.

As you may have gathered, I’m not one of those parents who has ‘well-travelled kids’ and if I could afford to put up with my restless children in Business (or even First) Class, I certainly would. Would you like a pith-less orange juice with that screaming child? Yes, please. Or a free pump of the lavender scented hand moisturiser in our bathroom while you change your just-toilet-trained toddlers undies for the fourth time? Why, thank you.

I have three kids under four. My choice. My problem. And I’m genuinely sorry if that problem ever becomes yours. Truly. Sometimes, I don’t even want to sit with my own children. Once, I caught myself thinking, “How much would I pay someone to look after my kids on this plane?” I may or may not have even asked my husband shortly after take-off.

Both Scoot and AirAsia X have no-children policies in business class and they also have child-free zones in economy. And apparently, Malaysia Airlines provides a child-free upper deck on select flights.

There are times that I’d quite like to ban certain people from my flight. Noisy business people who talk on their phone prior to departure? Travellers who hog seats at the departure lounge with their bags? People who board with stinky tuna sushi rolls? Well, maybe not. I may have done that too. But still. Sometimes I’m just not up for tuna smells wafting through the cabin. Just like sometimes you aren’t up for listening to my children.

But I won’t be banned. No. Because if we start, where will it stop? Movies, cafes, the car wash, supermarkets? There are three certainties in life – death, taxes and toddlers throwing tantrums.

Sometimes you just have to suck it up, right?

Do you think children should be banned from certain parts of the plane? Are your children ‘well-travelled’? What would you like to ban from your flight?

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Top Comments

Kitty 10 years ago

I think the issue here is the noise levels rather than the actual children. By paying extra for business class I would expect a quieter journey where I could sleep and concentrate on any work I have with me. If a quiet, well behaved child happens to be in there too then that isn't a problem. The problem is the people with several unruly children who let them run riot. The same thing goes for the adults too. Loud conversations or playing noisy films aren't appropriate for that area of the plane.


The Anxiety Haver 10 years ago

It's about respect for others, in my eyes. Taking the attitude that "I don't care if my screaming child is disturbing everyone else in my section. They can just deal with it" is utterly disrespectful to everyone else.

Yes, kids are "part of the human race." But being part of the human race (As the parents also are) means being not self centered enough to realize that your child is not the center of the universe, and that unapologetically ruining the flight of the other passengers is just a shitty thing to do.

I would gladly pay extra for a child free section if it would guarantee me a flight free from at least one preventable nuisance.