Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I had to sit next to an unaccompanied six year old and it was hell. I needed the plane time to prepare for a presentation when I landed. He kept talking to me and demanding attention.
I've sat next to grown adults that kept talking to me and demanding attention. There's no guarantee of who you are going to sit next to on a plane. Just like with an adult, you can tell the child that you're not able to chat because you have important work to do---and then ignore him if he continues to chat.
Anonymous wrote:I had to sit next to an unaccompanied six year old and it was hell. I needed the plane time to prepare for a presentation when I landed. He kept talking to me and demanding attention.
Anonymous wrote:I had to sit next to an unaccompanied six year old and it was hell. I needed the plane time to prepare for a presentation when I landed. He kept talking to me and demanding attention. [/quote
I've sat next to grown adults that kept talking to me and demanding attention. There's no guarantee of who you are going to sit next to on a plane. Just like with an adult, you can tell the child that you're not able to chat because you have important work to do---and then ignore him if he continues to chat.
Anonymous wrote:Anyone who does this or considers this is not a good parent, in my opinion. Too many things could go wrong and the child could be very scared and alone.
Anonymous wrote:Op here. Thanks for all of the great feedback. We've discussed it and decided to wait before we let him fly alone. I think we'll discuss it again around 8 or so. The question about diverted flights really concern me and I don't think my son would handle that scenario well. My mom will fly here to pick him up and I'll fly there to retrieve him.