Flying alone has never been easy for me. I live in a body that the world feels entitled to comment on, so when I travel,
I plan carefully to protect my peace. On a work trip to a conference, I did exactly that by purchasing two airplane seats—one for me, one beside me—not
for comfort or luxury, but so I wouldn’t have to spend hours pressed against a stranger who resented my existence. I boarded early, lifted the armrest, and settled into the small bubble of space I had paid for, finally feeling calm.
That calm lasted only minutes before an entitled couple stopped in the aisle, stared at my empty seat, and decided it belonged to them.
When I explained—politely—that I had purchased both seats, they laughed, ignored me, and sat down anyway, treating my boundaries like an inconvenience rather than a right.
The situation escalated quickly. The man spread out, crowding me, while his partner leaned in with dismissive remarks, accusing me of being dramatic and selfish for wanting space
I had paid for. Their words weren’t just rude; they were deliberately shaming, loud enough for nearby passengers to hear. I felt the familiar urge to shrink, to apologize, to disappear—
but something in me refused this time. Instead of arguing, I let them stay, quietly deciding I would no longer contort myself to make people like them comfortable.
I reclaimed my space inch by inch, calmly and confidently, using every seat, every armrest, every right I had purchased. Their irritation grew, but mine faded.
I wasn’t doing anything wrong—I was simply existing without permission.
Eventually, they called a flight attendant, accusing me of being the problem. That moment changed everything.
When the attendant checked the seating record and confirmed that both seats were mine, the couple’s confidence collapsed. They were told to return to their assigned seats, their complaints dismissed by facts they couldn’t argue with.
The attendant then addressed the inappropriate remarks that had been made, making it clear that harassment had no place on that flight. For the first time in years, I felt something unexpected: validation. I wasn’t overreacting. I wasn’t wrong. I deserved the space I paid for, and more importantly, the respect that should come with being human.
After landing, I filed a formal complaint—not out of spite, but out of self-respect. Days later, the airline confirmed that the incident had been documented and apologized, reinforcing that no passenger has the right to demean another. But the real victory wasn’t the apology or the bonus miles—it was internal. I walked away knowing I didn’t need to justify my body,
my choices, or my presence. That flight taught me a lesson I wish I’d learned sooner: taking up space is not something to apologize for. Whether it’s on an airplane or in life, peace sometimes comes not from avoiding conflict, but from standing your ground and refusing to be made smaller for someone else’s comfort.