Katie
Established Member
- Joined
- Sep 21, 2009
- Posts
- 1,979
Well, seething is never a useful or positive state of mind. Blind people or others with medical equipment or bassinets or whatever need to travel as much as any of we able-bodied, and the best response would be to accept that the good seat has been given to someone with a better need.
Absolutely. I calmed down and got over my upset when I realised it was a blind person with their guide dog. Up until the man stood up to go to the loo and was asking his travelling companion how many rows to count headrests to get back to the loo, I had not realised he was blind. I did not see that the dog was a labrador until they or we got off; if I'd seen that I might have guessed that it was a guide dog.
Until seeing he was blind I assumed that it was a regular everyday pet dog, like the dogs I've seen in carriers on US domestic flights. I didn't know if it was teacup poodle size or chihuahua size or what it was, as it was sitting on the ground and I didn't really see it. I seethed because of my assumptions about the size of the dog and thinking it was a pampered pooch in a carrier, and I've seen those dogs sitting in their carriers under seats on US flights before, so didn't see why the bulkhead was needed.
Of course, once I realised what was going on, that all changed. It was interesting to see how my assumptions helped form my reaction!