I am open to judgement people, good or bad. My dd1 is horrible sitting still and we have a seven hour flight with her on my lap in two weeks. I can't afford a seat for her and I'll also be with a well behaved but needing lots of attention 4 year old. Oh, and alone with no other adult. Is giving benedryl to make the baby sleep absolutely horrible of me? She's had it before (she went 23 hours without sleeping and approaching hysteria) so I know she doesn't have any allergies to this. Be honest, but be NICE.
I dealt with a squirmy 17 month old on a 4 hour flight from WA to San Diego. I was a miserable, sweaty, shaking MESS at the end of it. (and please note I'm a strong-armed person who had pretty much carried and held DS from the moment he arrived; I had serious arm muscles and thought I could handle it)
My husband was there but couldn't help as he's a bigger guy without much lap for DS to play on, and definitely no space because the person in front of him put his seat back. There was no room there for DS. I had the window seat with DS.
When he finally FINALLY fell asleep, I still couldn't relax because I had to HOLD him. I'm also in the position of being short with relatively short legs, so I was on tip-toes to keep my lap flat; it was either hold him 100% with shaking, exhausted arms or make my legs exhausted and shaky to keep him on my lap while giving my arms a rest. He was so long, though, that arms were never totally at rest, unless I wanted his head on the arm rest.
It was MISERY. When we got to the airport and my brother picked us up I was nearly in tears.
And I spent the entire vacation DREADING the flight home. Why? Because I didn't want to do it again, but we had budgeted to the bone and could not afford a ticket for the way back for DS. So I had to do it again.
It made that vacation awful every time I thought about it.
Getting another seat is just not possible.
Then don't go. Seriously.
Someone said you're visiting grandparents? If so, beg them for money for the seat. Do what you have to do. Or don't go.
If she's an angel who somehow supports her own weight the whole flight and is absolutely a joy, then that's great. But you're not going to know if she'll be like that until you are on that plane. And that's a junky time to find out you've got someone who will be freaking out or squirming or kicking the seatback or etc etc for 7 hours.
I've been there done that, and I will NEVER do it again.
The fact is physics is physics and your arms cannot hold on to your child in te event of turbulence.
My opinion is if you can't afford a seat for everyone you can't afford the trip.
And she especially won't be able to hold the baby if she's been struggling for 5 hours, her arms are tired, and THEN the sudden and extreme turbulence hits. Especially when one hand shoots out in the "keep the 4 year old safe" position.
My opinion based on experience is that if a person can't afford the seat the person can't afford the trip. Or they, at the very least, need to budget for a seat for her on the way back, just in case she's difficult and the OP is having panic attacks about part deux.
I flew with my son on 7 or 8 hour flights depending which direction we were going, 8 times with him on my lap. I don't understand why people are saying lap babies aren't strapped in as my son had a seat belt around him that was attached to my seat belt on the plane. Its the same one they use for people who are too big to fit into the normal seat belt.
That's not supposed to be done. Just think about what would happen to him if there had been horrid turbulence, or if you had crashed upon landing (not from the sky, but like in a car accident once on the ground). Turbulence...with his own seatbelt in his own seat, he's between the unmoving seat and the belt. With YOU under him, he's got moving and much bigger YOU moving up along with him, squishing him into that seatbelt. If you're in the on-ground accident, you are moving forward into him and upward into him, and squishing him in more than one way. Honestly at that point I'd take my chances with airborne baby, hoping he'll land on a soft surface, or at least not between two things squishing him.
We're not supposed to buckle in a lap baby with us.