Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I, a wife, get offered upgrades all the time due to my status with an airline. Sometimes my husband is also upgraded, sometimes not. If he isn’t, I decline the upgrade. The best seat on the plane is the one next to him.
Barf.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As a husband, I would have offered the seat to my wife. But she would have said no because she’s smaller than me (and doesn’t need the extra space in first class) and doesn’t drink (and therefore can’t take advantage of the free drinks). And if I said “let’s sit in coach together,” she would have said no (and meant it) because it’s passing up a good deal and because there’s no reason for both of us to suffer.
This is us. I don’t think OP is a troll. Dh travel for work a lot and has very high status. When we vacation internationally, we often all get upgraded. Sometimes only he does. He’s over six feet, and economy is highly uncomfortable for him. Versus for me, I’ll live in the small seats. He would probably offer me the front seat, and feel quite guilty about it, but in the end he and I would both know where the decision was going. If it was a daytime flight, we’d probably debate splitting halfway through. But night time flight? I would just tell him to eat dinner and take a melatonin and sleep. It’s fine! Someone should enjoy the free seat.
Exactly this. It happened to my DH and me once. I told him to take the upgrade. He told the flight attendant where I was, and she brought me a glass of champagne during the flight.
I'm the PP you're responding to, and I should have mentioned this: of course you send alcohol back! One time Dh and I went to Asia - he was already flying business class for work. We decided to use miles for me, but there was no business class left - only first and economy. We had zillions of points and hadn't traveled in years (young kids) so decided to blow out the bank and fly me on First. I sent him back a $100 of Japanese whiskey to his lowly business class seat.....
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I, a wife, get offered upgrades all the time due to my status with an airline. Sometimes my husband is also upgraded, sometimes not. If he isn’t, I decline the upgrade. The best seat on the plane is the one next to him.
Why? What difference does it make?
If you have to ask…yikes.
+1
Goodness. If somebody would rather [/b]sit by strangers [b]to get a nicer seat that's fine, but to truly not understand why it doesn't make a difference is just obtuse.
Anonymous wrote:As a husband, I would have offered the seat to my wife. But she would have said no because she’s smaller than me (and doesn’t need the extra space in first class) and doesn’t drink (and therefore can’t take advantage of the free drinks). And if I said “let’s sit in coach together,” she would have said no (and meant it) because it’s passing up a good deal and because there’s no reason for both of us to suffer.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Someone might as well take advantage. It's not like he paid extra to upgrade just himself. It was a fluke. Airplane time is not exactly loveliy time to chat . Trading half way through would be the best option.
Yes I think splitting half way would’ve been most fair. Unless DH has status from lots of work travel
Anonymous wrote:This was a Seinfeld episode (minus the marriage and the text).
Anonymous wrote:I, a wife, get offered upgrades all the time due to my status with an airline. Sometimes my husband is also upgraded, sometimes not. If he isn’t, I decline the upgrade. The best seat on the plane is the one next to him.
Anonymous wrote:Someone might as well take advantage. It's not like he paid extra to upgrade just himself. It was a fluke. Airplane time is not exactly loveliy time to chat . Trading half way through would be the best option.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As a husband, I would have offered the seat to my wife. But she would have said no because she’s smaller than me (and doesn’t need the extra space in first class) and doesn’t drink (and therefore can’t take advantage of the free drinks). And if I said “let’s sit in coach together,” she would have said no (and meant it) because it’s passing up a good deal and because there’s no reason for both of us to suffer.
This is us. I don’t think OP is a troll. Dh travel for work a lot and has very high status. When we vacation internationally, we often all get upgraded. Sometimes only he does. He’s over six feet, and economy is highly uncomfortable for him. Versus for me, I’ll live in the small seats. He would probably offer me the front seat, and feel quite guilty about it, but in the end he and I would both know where the decision was going. If it was a daytime flight, we’d probably debate splitting halfway through. But night time flight? I would just tell him to eat dinner and take a melatonin and sleep. It’s fine! Someone should enjoy the free seat.
Exactly this. It happened to my DH and me once. I told him to take the upgrade. He told the flight attendant where I was, and she brought me a glass of champagne during the flight.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I, a wife, get offered upgrades all the time due to my status with an airline. Sometimes my husband is also upgraded, sometimes not. If he isn’t, I decline the upgrade. The best seat on the plane is the one next to him.
Why? What difference does it make?
If you have to ask…yikes.
+1
Goodness. If somebody would rather sit by strangers to get a nicer seat that's fine, but to truly not understand why it doesn't make a difference is just obtuse.