A flight attendant’s 12 etiquette rules on a plane: Don’t take off your socks and please flush
10. DEAL WITH YOUR SEATING ISSUES BEFORE YOU GET ON THE PLANE
If your family is split up on the flight, the chaotic rush of boarding is not when flight attendants can solve it for you. The gate agents have access to the seating chart and family reservations, so please ask them first if it is possible to change your seats. Some airlines even have a policy that families with children under 13 must sit together, so the gate agent is the best place. Or even better: Call the airline before coming to the airport.
11. YOU DON’T HAVE TO SWITCH SEATS IF SOMEONE ASKS YOU
I’m going to be unpopular here. No, you do not have to switch with someone who asks you. If you have paid extra for your seat, or even if it is just an inconvenience, you can kindly say no. If it is advantageous, like trading a middle seat for a window seat, or you are happy to help, please go ahead and swap.
12. FLUSH. PLEASE.
This should be common sense, but somehow it isn’t. I deal with this all day, every day. I do not want to flush your deposit, and neither does the passenger after you. If you can’t find the button, please look for it. I guarantee it’s there. On every airplane.
By Kristie Koerbel © The New York Times Company
The article originally appeared in The New York Times.
Source: CNA