Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If flying with a lap infant is no big deal, then why does the FAA and the AAP strongly recommend against it?
You all can call me a sanctimommy all you want, but you’re still choosing the less safe option for no good reason.
Can you imagine this lady's poor children. Being raised by a completely neurotic mother has to be 1000000000X worse that any of the risks listed in this thread.
I know some people like this and I feel so badly for their poor kids who hardly ever get to do anything. Life is for living! You can’t put your kids in bubble wrap for 18 years!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If flying with a lap infant is no big deal, then why does the FAA and the AAP strongly recommend against it?
You all can call me a sanctimommy all you want, but you’re still choosing the less safe option for no good reason.
Can you imagine this lady's poor children. Being raised by a completely neurotic mother has to be 1000000000X worse that any of the risks listed in this thread.
Anonymous wrote:If flying with a lap infant is no big deal, then why does the FAA and the AAP strongly recommend against it?
You all can call me a sanctimommy all you want, but you’re still choosing the less safe option for no good reason.
Anonymous wrote:If flying with a lap infant is no big deal, then why does the FAA and the AAP strongly recommend against it?
You all can call me a sanctimommy all you want, but you’re still choosing the less safe option for no good reason.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I know one family who purchased a seat for a 1 year old and the allocated seat was not next to the parent
That’s on them. Make sure the seat is next to the parent.
Anonymous wrote:If you buy a seat for an infant, they have to be in the seat for take off and landing. It can be a pain to drag a car seat thru an airport. And my babies always screamed the most on takeoff and landing, unless I was nursing them. Which isn’t allowed if you have a seat for them. I was offered an extra seat on southwest when the flight wasn’t full, and declined it for this reason.
I have also never heard of a baby getting hurt as a lap held infant. I’m sure it has happened, but it seems pretty rare.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For the person who hadn’t heard of lap infants being injured:
3 babies suffered broken spines due to turbelence on a flight last year. https://www.mommyish.com/three-babies-suffer-broken-spines-severe-turbulence-flight/
And over 3,000 infants die annually from unsafe sleep- I’m assuming you never once let your baby sleep in a swing or rock n play, bedshared, put a blanket in the crib, etc. I didn’t, even though I’ve flown with a lap infant- because it’s impossiblw to prevent every possible tragedy so I focus on the statistically common ones. I bet if a hidden camera recorded your parenting for a week we could find plenty of instances of supposedly perfect parents making less than perfect choices. Because that’s how real life works.