ilovefh
Is it Disney time yet?
- Joined
- Sep 17, 2002
- Messages
- 2,866
First, let me say that I do empathize with the mom, I really do. However, she should have been prepared and it sounds like she could have handled it better. Here is how I think I would have handled it if it were me.
I would have left DH in the seat with DD and gone to speak with the flight attendant in private. I would have explained the whole situation calmly (daughter has autism, did not eat at restaurant before flight, would not take any snacks we had and was getting ready to melt down, only wants hot food.) I would have asked if there was any way they could help me get a warm meal for DD so she does not meltdown and bother other passengers. I'd hope at that point they would be understanding and helpful. I think a lot of it has to do with the way you speak to people. If you're demanding they don't want to help, but if you're calm and fully explain the situation most people will help.
As for the pilot coming out, well I think of it more like how a school is run. A teacher (flight attendant) relays the disruptive behavior, the principal (pilot) trusts that the person relaying the information is being honest and truthful and reacts accordingly.
I would have left DH in the seat with DD and gone to speak with the flight attendant in private. I would have explained the whole situation calmly (daughter has autism, did not eat at restaurant before flight, would not take any snacks we had and was getting ready to melt down, only wants hot food.) I would have asked if there was any way they could help me get a warm meal for DD so she does not meltdown and bother other passengers. I'd hope at that point they would be understanding and helpful. I think a lot of it has to do with the way you speak to people. If you're demanding they don't want to help, but if you're calm and fully explain the situation most people will help.
As for the pilot coming out, well I think of it more like how a school is run. A teacher (flight attendant) relays the disruptive behavior, the principal (pilot) trusts that the person relaying the information is being honest and truthful and reacts accordingly.