The comment stung, but I kept my voice steady. “I understand traveling with a child is hard. But I paid for the seat.”
She huffed and shifted her son on her hip. “You could be kind and let him sit there. He’s just a baby.”
At that point, I felt every pair of nearby eyes slowly turning toward us. My face burned. I hate confrontation. I hate being the center of attention even more.
“I’m sorry,” I said, “but I’m going to keep the seat I paid for.”
She rolled her eyes and called over a flight attendant.
When the attendant arrived, the mother explained that she needed the extra seat for her toddler and that I was “refusing to share.” The flight attendant asked to see our boarding passes. After checking the system, she confirmed that yes — I had indeed purchased both seats.
“I’m sorry, ma’am,” the attendant told the mother. “This passenger owns the seat.”
The mother shook her head in disbelief. “So we’re just supposed to squeeze in while she takes up two seats?”
The words hit harder than I expected.
The flight attendant gently repeated that there was nothing she could do. The mother and her toddler were assigned seats across the aisle.
As she walked away, she muttered loudly enough for half the cabin to hear, “Some people think money makes them more important than families.”
For the rest of the flight, I felt hyper-aware of my body. Even with the extra space, I didn’t relax. I could feel judgment hanging in the air.
But here’s the thing: I didn’t buy that second seat out of selfishness. I bought it out of consideration — for myself and for whoever might have otherwise been stuck next to me. I didn’t want to spill over into someone else’s space. I didn’t want to spend hours apologizing with my shoulders hunched in.
I paid for comfort. I paid for dignity.
When the plane landed and we began to disembark, the mother brushed past me without a word. I sat there for a moment, gathering my things, wondering if I had done the right thing.
Part of me felt guilty — not because I was wrong, but because society often teaches us that saying “no” makes us selfish. Especially when it involves a child.
But another part of me knew the truth.
I didn’t take anything from her. I didn’t deprive her son of something that was his. I simply kept what I had legally and fairly paid for.
And sometimes, standing your ground isn’t selfish.
Sometimes, it’s self-respect.