Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
We go to Europe and Asia to see our parents. Our toddler son liked to run up and down one aisle of the two-aisle plane, and our toddler daughter liked to stand on my lap and look at the people behind me. No crying except during landing and take-off because of ear pressure. No particular issues at our destinations either, with the caveat that my daughter woke up several times a night every night when she was little, whether she was home or away from home - so we were our "usual" sleep-deprived selves. Even now, 10 years later, she still wakes up very early, but at least doesn't bother us.
I just want you to know, OP, that when I hear a little one crying non-stop on a flight, I have nothing but compassion for the baby and family. I know you're doing everything you can and it's not your fault. Some kids are like that.
This is obnoxious, don't do this.
This is even worse
and our toddler daughter liked to stand on my lap and look at the people behind me
It's better than screams. You can't physically restrain a 1yo and they don't give a crap about cartoons or whatever fun toys you bring.
You can, of course, physically restrain a 1 year old. That's what carseats are for, but even otherwise, you can in fact hold a 1 year old.
How has your kid not been run over by a car yet?
Oh stop. I’d rather have a kid walking up and down the aisle than it screaming because it wants out of the car seat - which is 100% what would happen for most 1 year olds.
Do your kid scream in the carseat in the car?
By 1 my kids had 12 months of experience in the carseat to know that screaming didn't get them out. I don't know why they'd suddenly start screaming in the carseat on a plane.
Not that poster, but yeah, kids scream because they want to get out of their car seat. If you get them out at all to change a diaper, they'll know it's possible. One year olds can understand a lot and can understand that this is different than being in a car. They can literally see that everything all day long has been different.
One a short plane ride, maybe that won't be an issue, but 1 year old screaming to get out of the carseat in an airplane is a real thing.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
We go to Europe and Asia to see our parents. Our toddler son liked to run up and down one aisle of the two-aisle plane, and our toddler daughter liked to stand on my lap and look at the people behind me. No crying except during landing and take-off because of ear pressure. No particular issues at our destinations either, with the caveat that my daughter woke up several times a night every night when she was little, whether she was home or away from home - so we were our "usual" sleep-deprived selves. Even now, 10 years later, she still wakes up very early, but at least doesn't bother us.
I just want you to know, OP, that when I hear a little one crying non-stop on a flight, I have nothing but compassion for the baby and family. I know you're doing everything you can and it's not your fault. Some kids are like that.
This is obnoxious, don't do this.
This is even worse
and our toddler daughter liked to stand on my lap and look at the people behind me
It's better than screams. You can't physically restrain a 1yo and they don't give a crap about cartoons or whatever fun toys you bring.
You can, of course, physically restrain a 1 year old. That's what carseats are for, but even otherwise, you can in fact hold a 1 year old.
How has your kid not been run over by a car yet?
Oh stop. I’d rather have a kid walking up and down the aisle than it screaming because it wants out of the car seat - which is 100% what would happen for most 1 year olds.
Do your kid scream in the carseat in the car?
By 1 my kids had 12 months of experience in the carseat to know that screaming didn't get them out. I don't know why they'd suddenly start screaming in the carseat on a plane.
Not that poster, but yeah, kids scream because they want to get out of their car seat. If you get them out at all to change a diaper, they'll know it's possible. One year olds can understand a lot and can understand that this is different than being in a car. They can literally see that everything all day long has been different.
One a short plane ride, maybe that won't be an issue, but 1 year old screaming to get out of the carseat in an airplane is a real thing.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
We go to Europe and Asia to see our parents. Our toddler son liked to run up and down one aisle of the two-aisle plane, and our toddler daughter liked to stand on my lap and look at the people behind me. No crying except during landing and take-off because of ear pressure. No particular issues at our destinations either, with the caveat that my daughter woke up several times a night every night when she was little, whether she was home or away from home - so we were our "usual" sleep-deprived selves. Even now, 10 years later, she still wakes up very early, but at least doesn't bother us.
I just want you to know, OP, that when I hear a little one crying non-stop on a flight, I have nothing but compassion for the baby and family. I know you're doing everything you can and it's not your fault. Some kids are like that.
This is obnoxious, don't do this.
This is even worse
and our toddler daughter liked to stand on my lap and look at the people behind me
It's better than screams. You can't physically restrain a 1yo and they don't give a crap about cartoons or whatever fun toys you bring.
You can, of course, physically restrain a 1 year old. That's what carseats are for, but even otherwise, you can in fact hold a 1 year old.
How has your kid not been run over by a car yet?
Oh stop. I’d rather have a kid walking up and down the aisle than it screaming because it wants out of the car seat - which is 100% what would happen for most 1 year olds.
Do your kid scream in the carseat in the car?
By 1 my kids had 12 months of experience in the carseat to know that screaming didn't get them out. I don't know why they'd suddenly start screaming in the carseat on a plane.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
We go to Europe and Asia to see our parents. Our toddler son liked to run up and down one aisle of the two-aisle plane, and our toddler daughter liked to stand on my lap and look at the people behind me. No crying except during landing and take-off because of ear pressure. No particular issues at our destinations either, with the caveat that my daughter woke up several times a night every night when she was little, whether she was home or away from home - so we were our "usual" sleep-deprived selves. Even now, 10 years later, she still wakes up very early, but at least doesn't bother us.
I just want you to know, OP, that when I hear a little one crying non-stop on a flight, I have nothing but compassion for the baby and family. I know you're doing everything you can and it's not your fault. Some kids are like that.
This is obnoxious, don't do this.
This is even worse
and our toddler daughter liked to stand on my lap and look at the people behind me
It's better than screams. You can't physically restrain a 1yo and they don't give a crap about cartoons or whatever fun toys you bring.
You can, of course, physically restrain a 1 year old. That's what carseats are for, but even otherwise, you can in fact hold a 1 year old.
How has your kid not been run over by a car yet?
Oh stop. I’d rather have a kid walking up and down the aisle than it screaming because it wants out of the car seat - which is 100% what would happen for most 1 year olds.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
We go to Europe and Asia to see our parents. Our toddler son liked to run up and down one aisle of the two-aisle plane, and our toddler daughter liked to stand on my lap and look at the people behind me. No crying except during landing and take-off because of ear pressure. No particular issues at our destinations either, with the caveat that my daughter woke up several times a night every night when she was little, whether she was home or away from home - so we were our "usual" sleep-deprived selves. Even now, 10 years later, she still wakes up very early, but at least doesn't bother us.
I just want you to know, OP, that when I hear a little one crying non-stop on a flight, I have nothing but compassion for the baby and family. I know you're doing everything you can and it's not your fault. Some kids are like that.
This is obnoxious, don't do this.
Running up and down the aisle is totally normal and not obnoxious. PP, we also travel to Europe and Asia to visit our parents. You do what you gotta do on those 14-hour flights!
Anonymous wrote:Just started flying with my 13-month-old and have a few trips planned this summer to see family. Just returned from #1 and it was a Disaster - capital D, I have no idea how parents do this. She’s at the stage where she just wants to move so will not and cannot sit still, and is so frustrated the entire flight. Plus has a terrible time napping not in a dark room in a crib so screamed until she screamed herself to sleep then woke up 20 minutes later. I do know kids cry on planes, obviously, but am I doing something wrong in normal life? Is this indicative of behavioral problems (we don’t watch tv at home but definitely tried to use it and couldn’t hold her attention for more than 30 seconds - no toys, paper bags, etc would cut it either). I’m not one of those “my baby runs our lives” kind of person but I’m half tempted to cancel all upcoming trips. Would appreciate tips and perspective. She’s typically been a calm baby but within the last month has definitely turned up the whining.
Also know I’ll get the “SHE’S ONE CALM DOWN” responses and while I respect individual parenting styles frankly this behavior isn’t gonna fly long-term at my house so either let me know it’s a phase that I do need to wait out or I need some helpful advice (I’ve read all of the “what to bring on flights” advice - I need what do I do when my child throws a three-hour-fit advice).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
We go to Europe and Asia to see our parents. Our toddler son liked to run up and down one aisle of the two-aisle plane, and our toddler daughter liked to stand on my lap and look at the people behind me. No crying except during landing and take-off because of ear pressure. No particular issues at our destinations either, with the caveat that my daughter woke up several times a night every night when she was little, whether she was home or away from home - so we were our "usual" sleep-deprived selves. Even now, 10 years later, she still wakes up very early, but at least doesn't bother us.
I just want you to know, OP, that when I hear a little one crying non-stop on a flight, I have nothing but compassion for the baby and family. I know you're doing everything you can and it's not your fault. Some kids are like that.
This is obnoxious, don't do this.
This is even worse
and our toddler daughter liked to stand on my lap and look at the people behind me
It's better than screams. You can't physically restrain a 1yo and they don't give a crap about cartoons or whatever fun toys you bring.
You can, of course, physically restrain a 1 year old. That's what carseats are for, but even otherwise, you can in fact hold a 1 year old.
How has your kid not been run over by a car yet?
Oh stop. I’d rather have a kid walking up and down the aisle than it screaming because it wants out of the car seat - which is 100% what would happen for most 1 year olds.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
We go to Europe and Asia to see our parents. Our toddler son liked to run up and down one aisle of the two-aisle plane, and our toddler daughter liked to stand on my lap and look at the people behind me. No crying except during landing and take-off because of ear pressure. No particular issues at our destinations either, with the caveat that my daughter woke up several times a night every night when she was little, whether she was home or away from home - so we were our "usual" sleep-deprived selves. Even now, 10 years later, she still wakes up very early, but at least doesn't bother us.
I just want you to know, OP, that when I hear a little one crying non-stop on a flight, I have nothing but compassion for the baby and family. I know you're doing everything you can and it's not your fault. Some kids are like that.
This is obnoxious, don't do this.