Anonymous wrote:I suppose all you recliner people are within your rights to try to recline your seat back as much as you want, regardless of the impact on my knees.
Be warned though: We long-legged travelers have been dealing with this for years, and we are not defenseless. When I am sitting behind someone who looks like a recliner, I often use my arms and knees to physically hold the seat upright, preventing him from reclining. And if you drop your seat back into my lap, I will direct my air vent at your head, and drape my newspaper over the top of the seat, so it flaps against your head. I also will start using my knees to kick at the back of your seat. I've even been known to blow a stinky burp over the top of the seat. If you rudely invade my space, I will make your flight equally uncomfortable.
Want to avoid all this conflict? Just turn around and ask nicely before you recline your seat. I may ask that you do it gently and leave me a little space, but I'll never say no.
I hope this helps you.
Anonymous wrote:I have only flown a handful of times, and I am a seat recliner. Every flight I have ever been on the seat reclines like, 2 inches. I am also tall and usually the seat in front of me is also inclined, which has never bothered me (which I guess is why I don't think of it). I am careful to recline slowly though...
Anonymous wrote:I suppose all you recliner people are within your rights to try to recline your seat back as much as you want, regardless of the impact on my knees.
Be warned though: We long-legged travelers have been dealing with this for years, and we are not defenseless. When I am sitting behind someone who looks like a recliner, I often use my arms and knees to physically hold the seat upright, preventing him from reclining. And if you drop your seat back into my lap, I will direct my air vent at your head, and drape my newspaper over the top of the seat, so it flaps against your head. I also will start using my knees to kick at the back of your seat. I've even been known to blow a stinky burp over the top of the seat. If you rudely invade my space, I will make your flight equally uncomfortable.
Want to avoid all this conflict? Just turn around and ask nicely before you recline your seat. I may ask that you do it gently and leave me a little space, but I'll never say no.
I hope this helps you.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:When your kids stop crying, whining, kicking, and.being a general nuisance. I wll stop reclining seat, or alternatively, when you pay for my ticket.
So we can then assume that you purposely sit only in front of screaming toddlers?
I try to sit as far as possible from children and I hope. no-kid flights become a reality very soon.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am going to assume that it is just one poster posting over and over about it being rude to recline your seat. Probably that poster has only flown once in their lives and had the bad fortune of leaning to get something and getting wacked by a reclining.
I fly often, as do my colleagues, none of us have ever even heard of it being rude to recline. Everyone reclines. It is how airplane seats are made to function.
If you are sitting in front of me, recline away!
Nope. I'm the person who originally posted about it being rude on the other thread and in total, I think I've posted 5 times. As I said, I fly about 10-15 times per year and have been a pretty frequent flier since childhood. About half my flights are work-related and about half, I have my toddler with me. Unless you're on a redeye and everyone is reclined to sleep, it's inconsiderate.
Anonymous wrote:there is no way i am not reclining. the seat is so upright i actually hunch forward (i'm short) if i don't. sorry, this is a made up rule that i think only a few people are trying to pretend has some legitimacy...
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:When your kids stop crying, whining, kicking, and.being a general nuisance. I wll stop reclining seat, or alternatively, when you pay for my ticket.
So we can then assume that you purposely sit only in front of screaming toddlers?