Fight of Flight
By Tiffany Lewis
This
world was not built for children.
Airplanes, grocery stores, malls — none were created with children in mind. If they
were, grocery store shelves would be built five feet off the
floor. There would be childproof gates in front of porcelain
stores in the mall. Airplanes … well,
I’m not sure airplanes would exist at all.
I
have flown solo with my two boys several times. The last time
was at Christmas, when my younger son Addison was just over
a year, and still not walking. It was a great flight. I actually
said, direct quote, “That was so much fun.” Strangers remarked
on my angelic children. I chalked it all up on my list of motherly
accomplishments.
Until my latest flight to Texas.
Now
Addison is 18 months, with so much energy you can almost feel
the magnetic field shooting out of his red hair. Jackson, who’s
three, is more subdued, but put him in the right environment,
and like baking soda and vinegar, you get an eruption.
We
got off to a good start, three of us wedged into two seats.
(Yes, we’re too cheap to pay for that extra ticket until we
absolutely have to.) Twenty minutes into the flight Addison looked at me and announced, “Seat. All done!”
Just then the captain came on, saying we had just over two
hours left of flying time. I took a deep breath. This was
going to be long.
Flying
with children is akin to sitting in stake conference for three
hours, except there are no speakers, no standing musical numbers,
and no escape foyer. It’s a recipe for disaster.
After
cheese sticks, fruit snacks, two sippy
cups of apple juice and Bitty Bear Picks Pumpkins, the
boys got down to the serious business of completely annoying
each other. I finally wedged myself between them. Jackson
started scaling his seat, much to the amusement of the entire
airplane audience behind him. Our blessed neighbors entertained
him with great patience, until he spewed them repeatedly with
his own spit. Then all they could do was hold
up an airplane blanket for protection.
Addison,
deliriously tired, banged his head on the plexiglass
window and threw his body around, smashing into tray tables,
arm rests, and my head.
This
was only the first flight.
During
the layover Jackson ran down the hall like a human airplane. He had a plastic
band around his head that read “2 Pk
Letter Tray”. Addison threatened mutiny if I didn’t let him out of the stroller.
Once released, he immediately ran for the computers behind
the gate check-in counter. Then he headed for the emergency
exit. He was halfway down the jetway to Santa Fe before I caught up with him.
On
the second flight the man next to us lasted about five minutes
before tactfully suggesting that maybe we needed more room.
I could have handed over my entire stash of fruit snacks in
appreciation. That third seat made all the difference. Now
my kids had real space to wreak havoc. I gave them a SkyMall
Magazine, which they immediately ripped to shreds. It gave me
five minutes of peace, so I didn’t stop them.
The
magazine desecration reached a climax when the boys began lobbing
pieces over the seat in front of them. I watched in horror
as the bits rested like falling snow in the hair of a sleeping
woman. I confiscated the magazine and all its pieces. Addison, furious that I intercepted his fun, grabbed
the hair of the sleeping woman and yanked it as hard as he could.
It was, for the record, her real hair.
The
plane ride did come to an end. Strolling down the jetway
into Austin, Texas, I felt a bit like that magazine, tattered
and all in pieces.
Since
then, I’ve been conjuring in my mind the dream airplane for
children. I’ve heard motherly testimonies about the personal
TVs that come with every seat on JetBlue.
Those would be nice, but I’m thinking along the lines of a large
open area near the back of the plane filled with buttons, preferably
the kind that don’t ring the flight attendant to your side.
Or even just a designated children’s section. They could call
it Kid Class, and it would be behind a soundproof barrier so
all the kids could join together in an ear-popping chorus of
screams. They’d hand out sippy cups
of apple juice and crackers instead of peanuts (choking hazard)
and ice-filled plastic cups (major spill hazard). Instead of
magazines promoting personal hot dog cookers, the seat back
would be filled with Sandra Boynton board books. I’d keep the
motion-sickness bags, since they make nice puppets. The bathroom
would feature a full-sized changing mat, so parents wouldn’t
have to tackle dirty diapers on an area the size of a tray table.
It’s
all a dream really. An impossible dream.
Which is why, next time, I think I’ll take the train.