Anonymous wrote:I’d get very annoyed because my mom snores like this and I find it very selfish to sleep soundly while other people have to deal with it. It’s a gross habit and I’m not convinced people are helpless.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I bought a relatively cheap headband thing on amazon that is an eye mask with bluetooth headphones in it (because I hate ear plugs and am a side sleeper). I connected it to my phone on Spotify with a 10 hour playlist of white noise machine sounds (there are several on there, just search, both on amazon for the headband and on spotify for white noise playlists).
I wore it on my red eye to England last summer and literally slept 6 hours straight which is insane for me. Slept through both meal services (dinner and breakfast) and had to be woken up to raise my set and be ready for landing. I imagine something like this would help if snoring is loud.
Too bad the headband thing can't also teach you how to read. OP said she has young kids, so she can't block sounds while sleeping.
Anonymous wrote:Do ppl who snore realize how much they inconvenience others?
Get a cpap, or don’t sleep on a plane.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Eh she can’t help it. I’d just put my headphones on.
+1 I fly for work long haul pretty frequently, and this happens all the time (although usually it's a man doing it rather than a woman). You can't prevent people from sleeping on a long haul flight, I've never seen a flight attendant wake up any passenger who was snoring. If you're in business class, you get nice Bose headsets, and I sleep wearing those. If not, invest in good earplugs.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:yes 6 hours is not long haul i should have clarified that it was an overnight flight meaning people were counting on being able to sleep so that they could adjust to the time zone.
as i said i had little kids with me so was limited in terms of the noise cancelling options for them. snorer was directly behind them so hard to muffle.
next time i’ll ask the FA to address.
You're not entitled to perfect sleeping conditions just because it is an overnight flight. If it were someone playing a video or a drunk person being rowdy it would be a different story, but the snorer isn't obligated to stay awake because you want to sleep.
You can't prevent people from farting either OP. The human body is the human body. The most you could ask for was to change seats if there were any openings.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:yes 6 hours is not long haul i should have clarified that it was an overnight flight meaning people were counting on being able to sleep so that they could adjust to the time zone.
as i said i had little kids with me so was limited in terms of the noise cancelling options for them. snorer was directly behind them so hard to muffle.
next time i’ll ask the FA to address.
You're not entitled to perfect sleeping conditions just because it is an overnight flight. If it were someone playing a video or a drunk person being rowdy it would be a different story, but the snorer isn't obligated to stay awake because you want to sleep.
You can't prevent people from farting either OP. The human body is the human body. The most you could ask for was to change seats if there were any openings.
Farting is basically assault
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:yes 6 hours is not long haul i should have clarified that it was an overnight flight meaning people were counting on being able to sleep so that they could adjust to the time zone.
as i said i had little kids with me so was limited in terms of the noise cancelling options for them. snorer was directly behind them so hard to muffle.
next time i’ll ask the FA to address.
You're not entitled to perfect sleeping conditions just because it is an overnight flight. If it were someone playing a video or a drunk person being rowdy it would be a different story, but the snorer isn't obligated to stay awake because you want to sleep.
You can't prevent people from farting either OP. The human body is the human body. The most you could ask for was to change seats if there were any openings.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I bought a relatively cheap headband thing on amazon that is an eye mask with bluetooth headphones in it (because I hate ear plugs and am a side sleeper). I connected it to my phone on Spotify with a 10 hour playlist of white noise machine sounds (there are several on there, just search, both on amazon for the headband and on spotify for white noise playlists).
I wore it on my red eye to England last summer and literally slept 6 hours straight which is insane for me. Slept through both meal services (dinner and breakfast) and had to be woken up to raise my set and be ready for landing. I imagine something like this would help if snoring is loud.
Too bad the headband thing can't also teach you how to read. OP said she has young kids, so she can't block sounds while sleeping.
Anonymous wrote:6 hours is NOT long haul.
Deal with it.
Anonymous wrote:Eh she can’t help it. I’d just put my headphones on.