Anonymous wrote:Pretend to be disabled and pre-board like every other lying jerk who flies Southwest. It’s free and no one asks any questions.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't normally fly Southwest and I have no kind of status with them. A relative used points to buy tickets for me and my 10 year old to fly from BWI to Raleigh (and back) for a visit. These will be weekday flights in August so hopefully not crowded, but I'm still a little worried about seating. Is there anything I can or should do to ensure we have no trouble sitting together on the flights?
Before I had kids, I never liked to fly Southwest. I always thought it was somehow a lesser airline. However, after having kids it’s the only airline I fly unless I cannot because of the route, or some other reason. I love Southwest because there are lots of kids and babies on board who are crying etc. and it makes me feel very very comfortable if my children aren’t being perfectl. And that’s in stark contrast to something like United where you have eye rollers who think because they paid for premium economy, or something like that that they’re entitled to complete silence.
All the negative attention about children and parents sitting together is disturbing, but quite frankly I’ve never experienced it. I’ve never known anyone who has personally experienced it, and I have never had a problem sleeping with my kids, even when they were babies.
+1
What is the big deal. Parents want to sit with their kids and people are freaking out. What if there was an emergency on the plan, are the strangers on the plane sitting near my child really going to look out for them or comfort them?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't normally fly Southwest and I have no kind of status with them. A relative used points to buy tickets for me and my 10 year old to fly from BWI to Raleigh (and back) for a visit. These will be weekday flights in August so hopefully not crowded, but I'm still a little worried about seating. Is there anything I can or should do to ensure we have no trouble sitting together on the flights?
Before I had kids, I never liked to fly Southwest. I always thought it was somehow a lesser airline. However, after having kids it’s the only airline I fly unless I cannot because of the route, or some other reason. I love Southwest because there are lots of kids and babies on board who are crying etc. and it makes me feel very very comfortable if my children aren’t being perfectl. And that’s in stark contrast to something like United where you have eye rollers who think because they paid for premium economy, or something like that that they’re entitled to complete silence.
All the negative attention about children and parents sitting together is disturbing, but quite frankly I’ve never experienced it. I’ve never known anyone who has personally experienced it, and I have never had a problem sleeping with my kids, even when they were babies.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't normally fly Southwest and I have no kind of status with them. A relative used points to buy tickets for me and my 10 year old to fly from BWI to Raleigh (and back) for a visit. These will be weekday flights in August so hopefully not crowded, but I'm still a little worried about seating. Is there anything I can or should do to ensure we have no trouble sitting together on the flights?
Before I had kids, I never liked to fly Southwest. I always thought it was somehow a lesser airline. However, after having kids it’s the only airline I fly unless I cannot because of the route, or some other reason. I love Southwest because there are lots of kids and babies on board who are crying etc. and it makes me feel very very comfortable if my children aren’t being perfectl. And that’s in stark contrast to something like United where you have eye rollers who think because they paid for premium economy, or something like that that they’re entitled to complete silence.
All the negative attention about children and parents sitting together is disturbing, but quite frankly I’ve never experienced it. I’ve never known anyone who has personally experienced it, and I have never had a problem sleeping with my kids, even when they were babies.
Anonymous wrote:OP here, thanks! It sounds like I can choose to spend money to upgrade boarding if I don't get a good boarding group upon check-in? If so, that's what I'll do.
I know SW has many fans, but to me it's so needlessly inconvenient not to assign seats.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The last flight they announced any MINOR could do family boarding. I don’t think you’ll have any problem. Set an alarm to check in right at 24 hours in advance to be absolutely sure.
Call me horrible, but I think it should be limited to small kids. The Southwest policy is seven and under. I would not normally care, but I've had three flights recently where I paid for early check-in and wound up in the B group. I don't think it's fair that people who paid to board earlier should have to defer to those who did not pay and who don't fit the criteria for family boarding.
Seven is young and that's likely why Southwest employees choose not to enforce it. If it was a more common sense age, then sure, be more strict about it. But believe me, flight attendants would rather kids just be sitting with their parents and letting them board with family boarding is the surest way to guarantee that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:guess I should have been more specific… strange adults. With no background checks.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m not the OP but it’s not about not sitting with me. It’s about sitting next to complete strangers in a somewhat confined space. Where else would you force an young child to sit a few inches from a stranger with no parent present? It’s asinine.Anonymous wrote:Your 10 yr old can't sit without you for a couple of hours??? This shouldn't be an issue.
School buses. Kids all over the country do it every single day.
-not the pp you quoted.
Exactly what do you think will happen? They will also be surrounded by other adults. If you were sitting on a plane and saw a small child being harmed by a stranger, would you just mind your own business? Or would you speak up/intervene?
Who is going to see or hear something on a loud plane where people are squished together? See it at all, or see it with enough confidence that they'd make a stink on the plane when they dont even know the adult isnt the kid's parent? Plus once it's happening the harm has already started, even if the kid yells and stands up.
ES kids shouldn't be seated away from parents, and I'm actually surprised airlines even allow the potential for in-flight drama over it. I think flying an unaccompanied minor is kinda nuts too but at least there the airline takes charge of the kid. That's not what's happening in open seating.
When I was 10, I was in 5th grade which was middle school, not elementary school.
So you're not familiar with the school systems in the DMV? Kids go to middle school in 6th grade.
Not everyone is in the DMV.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Pretend to be disabled and pre-board like every other lying jerk who flies Southwest. It’s free and no one asks any questions.
I've been flying SW a lot recently and was wondering how all these people got pre-boarding! No visible disability and they walked onto the plane no problem. I also saw one individual in a wheelchair but they were brining 5-6 family members with them. It was really out of control. What's the point of the number system if so many people cut the line.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Pretend to be disabled and pre-board like every other lying jerk who flies Southwest. It’s free and no one asks any questions.
I've been flying SW a lot recently and was wondering how all these people got pre-boarding! No visible disability and they walked onto the plane no problem. I also saw one individual in a wheelchair but they were brining 5-6 family members with them. It was really out of control. What's the point of the number system if so many people cut the line.
The last time I flew SW I was amazed that there were 50? HS aged kids that were all boarded even before the A's. I guess it was because they were a group?
Anonymous wrote:Pretend to be disabled and pre-board like every other lying jerk who flies Southwest. It’s free and no one asks any questions.
Anonymous wrote:I don't normally fly Southwest and I have no kind of status with them. A relative used points to buy tickets for me and my 10 year old to fly from BWI to Raleigh (and back) for a visit. These will be weekday flights in August so hopefully not crowded, but I'm still a little worried about seating. Is there anything I can or should do to ensure we have no trouble sitting together on the flights?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Pretend to be disabled and pre-board like every other lying jerk who flies Southwest. It’s free and no one asks any questions.
I've been flying SW a lot recently and was wondering how all these people got pre-boarding! No visible disability and they walked onto the plane no problem. I also saw one individual in a wheelchair but they were brining 5-6 family members with them. It was really out of control. What's the point of the number system if so many people cut the line.
The last time I flew SW I was amazed that there were 50? HS aged kids that were all boarded even before the A's. I guess it was because they were a group?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Pretend to be disabled and pre-board like every other lying jerk who flies Southwest. It’s free and no one asks any questions.
I've been flying SW a lot recently and was wondering how all these people got pre-boarding! No visible disability and they walked onto the plane no problem. I also saw one individual in a wheelchair but they were brining 5-6 family members with them. It was really out of control. What's the point of the number system if so many people cut the line.
Anonymous wrote:I would check if you have early bird checkin— I think it comes automatically with some fare classes so some award tickets get it.
If you don’t have it and are worried, you can spend like $20 pp to get it. Early bird checkin has southwest check you in before anyone not paying for it so it will guarantee you boarding numbers low enough to sit together.
That said if you just set an alarm on your phone for 24 hrs before your flight and check in as close to 24 hours as possible it is highly likely you will be able to get a low enough number to sit together.