@[email protected] Everyone’s problem would be solved by putting all passengers in pods and sedating them for the duration of the flight.
@[email protected]
Noise canceling headphones are a must on flights. I really wished I had them on the flight where I had a nosy society column writer sitting next to me.@[email protected] it’s people’s own responsibility to bring noise cancelling headphones when flying. With those on the volume isn’t a problem, and it’s not your baby, so that’s not a problem either.
In short, bring noise cancelling headphones to your flight.@[email protected] I always bring ear plugs or ear buds or something to drown out noise if I’m flying. I would rather hear a noise machine than a crying baby.
@[email protected] “The lady turns around and she goes, ‘Oh, so your daughter does know how to smile.'”
This says it all for me. Just a nasty person. I’d much rather have a sound machine than a crying kid.@[email protected] This is why I don’t fly unless I am out of choices.
@[email protected] Never having heard of or heard a Sound machine. I can understand anyone complaining of any strange additive noise on a flight. However, the stress of traveling with a young child is very high level. As a parent I would have investigated whether I could get ear muffs that could play the sounds without impacting anyone else.
@[email protected] How loud was it? Doesn’t need to be on very loud at all for the baby to hear (assuming earbuds are not an option) and shouldn’t carry much beyond the seat. If it was so loud other passengers were complaining I can see their point.
Dear Mr. Takei,
I realize that this may not be a popular opinion, but here goes:
Why can’t airlines offer a “Sceaching Hell-Spawn Free” class on certain flights?
That, or maybe the Swaddling Clothes Car Alarms can be shipped by Freight…?
@[email protected] Flew regularly with my kids as babies, wouldn’t dream then or now of playing noises loud enough that other passengers would not only hear but be irritated enough to complain about 😬
@[email protected] I have to say I would rather external noisemakers of any kind - without headsets/earpieces - should not be allowed to be used. Period.
Do not think you can do so just because it is the only thing that stops your baby from crying.
Ever think of recording the white noise and playing it through a “pillow speaker” so your child can hear it but it doesn’t bother anyone else?
@[email protected] Planes are already loud and uncomfortable. Playing a sound machine is as annoying as playing music or a movie without headphones. I don’t like being that person, but if you can’t travel by air without disturbing other people with your noise, don’t travel by air. I know not all other alternatives are good, and staying home may be lonely, but the level of entitlement here is just extreme. And the “I could have murdered her” comment is just gross.
@[email protected] I mean my first reaction is “complaining lady clearly has NFI how much more pleasant her flight probably was, with the sound machine rather than a constantly screaming baby”.
Edit: but having said that, feeling like you can just bring a sound machine on a plane does seem very entitledI prefer the sound machine to the sound of a crying child. Unfortunately, all babies are different and while some can sleep anywhere, others can’t. I think it’s best for the grown adults to compromise with the tiny person and the overworked parents. I know it’s not easy, but it makes for a better society in the long run. As it is, people ask parents, especially mothers, to separate themselves from society because they inconvenience us, and it’s isolating and not good.
@[email protected]
Children under 4 yrs should be stored in the hold and reclaimed (maybe) on landing!More seriously, how loud and/or annoying is one of these machines? My experience of needing to do something others might object to is that explaining what and why you’re about to do it gets you a lot of slack.