Flying home at seven months pregnant, completely drained after a week of back-to-back client meetings and too much hotel food, I had assumed turbulence would be the worst part of the trip.
I was very, very wrong.
When an entitled seatmate crossed a line I didn’t even know I had, I finally found the courage to stand up for myself—and in doing so, I learned something important about claiming my space, no matter who’s watching.
For illustrative purposes only
I was seven months pregnant, traveling alone, and doing everything in my power not to burst into tears… over a stranger’s bare feet.
This was not how I had imagined spending my Thursday.
The plan had been simple:
Get to the airport on time.
Board the plane.
Land.
Hug Hank.
Collapse into bed.
I had already texted my husband: “I’ll be home soon. The baby and I want pasta with extra cheese.”
His reply made me smile instantly: “Already boiling the water, Sum. Can’t wait to see you.”
But clearly, the universe had other plans.
I waddled through security—yes, waddled, because my ankles looked like I’d just lost a fight with a swarm of bees—and barely made it to the gate before final boarding.
“You’re almost home, Summer,” I whispered to myself. “Almost back to your own bed.”
Instead… I met Nancy.
Her handbag had her name engraved on it in elegant gold script. She swept into our row like air travel itself was a personal inconvenience designed specifically to annoy her. Sunglasses perched on her head, phone glued to her ear, she didn’t even glance in my direction.
“No, Rachel,” she said loudly. “If they downgrade my room again, I will escalate. I’m not dealing with that level of incompetence today.”
She tossed her tote bag straight into the middle seat—my row, of course—then snapped her fingers toward the overhead bin.
“Excuse me, can someone help me with this?”
A college kid behind us stood up to assist, but she barely acknowledged his existence.
I slid toward the window and offered a polite, “Hi.”
Nancy let out a dramatic sigh and gave me the faintest side-eye before dropping into the seat beside me. She immediately started fiddling with the air vent.
“It’s freezing.”
“Do you want a blanket?” I asked gently. “I’m not using mine.”
She ignored me completely and pressed the call button.
The flight attendant, Stacey, appeared almost instantly.
“Can you turn the air down and bring me a sparkling water, no ice? And a blanket, preferably not one someone else has used. I’m allergic to cheap detergent.”
Stacey maintained a professional smile. “Absolutely, I’ll see what I can do.”
Nancy turned to me, shaking her head.
“You’d think for the price, they’d treat frequent flyers like humans. I fly three times a week. You learn what you deserve.”
I shifted slightly, pulling my knees closer as the baby moved uncomfortably.
“Sorry,” I said quietly. “I just need a little space. Traveling while pregnant is tough.”
She rolled her eyes and muttered under her breath, “Some people are so sensitive.”
Nancy didn’t just complain.
She performed it.
“This cheese smells weird.”
“Why is the lighting so harsh?”
“Can I get fresh lemon? No, fresh fresh.”
Each request sharper than the last. Each press of the call button louder, more deliberate.
Her tote bag pressed into my legs.
“Sorry,” I said, nudging it gently.
She didn’t even look at me.
For illustrative purposes only
That was the moment I realized—she wasn’t going to stop.
I tried to tune her out by opening The Honest Mom’s Guide to Pregnancy, rereading the same sentence over and over again about breathing exercises.
“Focus on your center.”
My “center” was currently dealing with heartburn, a tight seatbelt, and a stranger invading every inch of my personal space.
Eventually, the hum of the engines mixed with Nancy’s constant complaining, and I drifted into a shallow, restless half-sleep.
I woke up suddenly.
And immediately wished I hadn’t.
Nancy’s bare feet were planted squarely on my tray table.
One of them rested directly on my paperwork. My half-empty cup of tea sat dangerously close to her heel.
“Excuse me,” I said, trying to stay calm. “Could you move your feet?”
She didn’t even look at me.
“Yeah? And what are you going to do if I don’t?”
I pressed the call button.
“You’re putting your feet on my tray,” I said, my voice firmer now. “That’s where my food goes. This isn’t okay.”
She let out a short, dismissive snort.
“It’s just feet. I’m more comfortable this way. You’re already taking up enough room for both of us, you know.”
“I’m seven months pregnant,” I said, holding her gaze. “Please move your feet.”
She rolled her eyes again.
“Pregnant women act like the whole world’s supposed to stop for them.”
Stacey arrived quickly.
“Is there a problem here?”
“She put her feet on my tray,” I explained, “and refuses to move them.”
Stacey’s expression tightened slightly.
“Ma’am, your feet need to stay on the floor. Please remove them, or I’ll have to reseat you.”
Nancy crossed her arms.
“Or what?”
Stacey didn’t hesitate.
“Or I will reseat you.”
Nancy huffed loudly but finally dropped her feet to the ground.
“Unbelievable.”
I thought that would be the end of it.
It wasn’t.
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