.Anonymous wrote:I've done 20 hour trips with 15 months and 20 months. It was fine. We've also done similarly long trips at younger and older ages with only one bad experience. A lot of international families make it work.
Does your child like tv? Find out now and make sure you have access to favorite shows. What's available on the plane might not be what keeps your child's attention. Also, books are toys are good, but they're not going to help much on such a long flight. Be prepared to turn on the screens.
Anonymous wrote:I am in the foreign service and was posted in Asia. I had a baby while there. Should I have left the baby there because it was cruel to bring her home on the 27 hour flight?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am in the foreign service and was posted in Asia. I had a baby while there. Should I have left the baby there because it was cruel to bring her home on the 27 hour flight?
My, my, aren't you a bit too touchy! You posted on DCUM asking for advice and you have four pages. If this was your first time posting then this was a baptism of fire. The obvious question is why you can't break up a 27 hour flight. Frankly, I feel sorry for the other passengers because they are going to be on the flight from Hell.
Anonymous wrote:I am in the foreign service and was posted in Asia. I had a baby while there. Should I have left the baby there because it was cruel to bring her home on the 27 hour flight?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am in the foreign service and was posted in Asia. I had a baby while there. Should I have left the baby there because it was cruel to bring her home on the 27 hour flight?
Why were you required to take a 27 hour fight?
Anonymous wrote:I am in the foreign service and was posted in Asia. I had a baby while there. Should I have left the baby there because it was cruel to bring her home on the 27 hour flight?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why are you subjecting your child to this?
There is literally NOTHING on planet earth that would make me take an 18 month old on a 24 hour airplane trip. Literally nothing.
This is amazing advice, thank you so much. I'm sure OP is flying back and forth to Disney land 3x for fun
Look I have three kids. Please tell me what is important enough to subject an 18 month old to this for? I can think of one scenario only: her parent is dying and she literally has no one to leave the child with- not another parent, not a friend, not a nanny. OP is this the case? If so you get a pass. Otherwise? This is cruel and borderline insane.
I have no idea, I haven't done it myself, but I have enough awareness that people lead different lives from me. So if you can't stay on topic, post somewhere else. Or get a life.
On topic? She asked what would make it easier. Nothing will make this easier because it is frankly cruel. I promise OP is going on an exotic vacation for social media. Sorry but posting an asinine idea like this on a public forum is going to get honest answers. If you don't like it don't read it, don't post about it. The only person I feel bad for in this situation is this poor child. Notice a lot of veteran moms chiming in to say the same thing.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why are you subjecting your child to this?
There is literally NOTHING on planet earth that would make me take an 18 month old on a 24 hour airplane trip. Literally nothing.
This is amazing advice, thank you so much. I'm sure OP is flying back and forth to Disney land 3x for fun
Look I have three kids. Please tell me what is important enough to subject an 18 month old to this for? I can think of one scenario only: her parent is dying and she literally has no one to leave the child with- not another parent, not a friend, not a nanny. OP is this the case? If so you get a pass. Otherwise? This is cruel and borderline insane.
I have no idea, I haven't done it myself, but I have enough awareness that people lead different lives from me. So if you can't stay on topic, post somewhere else. Or get a life.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why are you subjecting your child to this?
There is literally NOTHING on planet earth that would make me take an 18 month old on a 24 hour airplane trip. Literally nothing.
This is amazing advice, thank you so much. I'm sure OP is flying back and forth to Disney land 3x for fun
Look I have three kids. Please tell me what is important enough to subject an 18 month old to this for? I can think of one scenario only: her parent is dying and she literally has no one to leave the child with- not another parent, not a friend, not a nanny. OP is this the case? If so you get a pass. Otherwise? This is cruel and borderline insane.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why are you subjecting your child to this?
There is literally NOTHING on planet earth that would make me take an 18 month old on a 24 hour airplane trip. Literally nothing.
This is amazing advice, thank you so much. I'm sure OP is flying back and forth to Disney land 3x for fun
Look I have three kids. Please tell me what is important enough to subject an 18 month old to this for? I can think of one scenario only: her parent is dying and she literally has no one to leave the child with- not another parent, not a friend, not a nanny. OP is this the case? If so you get a pass. Otherwise? This is cruel and borderline insane.
Military orders, foreign service family moving, child or parent needs medical care not available in the home country . . .
This is going to be harder on the parent than anyone else. If OP has decided it’s worth it then respect her decision.
Barring medical emergency, all of these reasons can be accomplished by splitting the flight into segments with good breaks in between to leave the airport. Keeping a mobile 18 mo on a plane for the better part of 24 hours is cruel. And no, I don't think it's worse for mom than toddler.
OP, break up your flight with layovers that let you go to a park and a hotel.