Friday 17 June 2016

Flight Attendants' Experiences

When passengers board aeroplanes and the aircraft takes to the skies, social norms go out of the window and anything goes – or at least that’s what flight attendants' eye-opening accounts suggest.

From impossible complaints to unsanitary behaviour, flight attendants largely have to grit their teeth and remain professional regardless of what they're faced with.

“People don’t have a filter with us,” veteran flight attendant Emily said.

“They have that comfort level with us where they’ll say anything.”

Here are some of the strangest things that those who work on-board commercial flights have been forced to deal with.

A flight attendant who identifies herself only as “Betty” said that one woman ordered her to make that “blasted noise” to stop.

“I think you are referring to the engines, and we better all pray that they don’t stop,” she replied.

“Guys, the water lines haven't ever been cleaned – ever,” former flight attendant Heather said.

“It’s like as soon as they get on the plane they are in a bubble all alone.

She witnessed passengers biting their nails, breaking wind and popping acne during flights.

Fellow flight attendant Liz Corcoran said that someone once blew their nose on a linen napkin, and handed it to her despite the fact she didn’t have a tray and wasn’t wearing gloves.

Another passenger asked Ms Corcoran to wait as she pulled strands of hair from her head, balled them up and put them in an empty teacup on her tray.

The Passenger Shaming Instagram and Facebook pages offer disgustingly visual proof of how inconsiderate some passengers can be, particularly when it comes to leaving litter behind.

Images on the site show packaging and food strewn across aisles, and bloody bandages stuffed into seats.

The Passenger Shaming pages also reveal how people feet are unleased on flights. Judging by these photos, it is hardly surprising that a recent study revealed that tray tables are the dirtiest places on aeroplanes - collecting more bacteria than the lavatory flush button.

The Huffington Post recently asked members of the Flight Attendant Career Connection Facebook page to shed light on irritating mid-flight behaviour, with user Nia Monet flagging that she couldn't understand why passengers insist on taking up the galley.

“Do I come to your office to do yoga and hang around?!” she wrote on the page.

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