KICKING SEATS ON A FLIGHT. NOT COOL!

I donโ€™t care how zen you think you areโ€”someone kicking the back of your seat nonstop on a five-hour flight will test every nerve youโ€™ve got. I was flying from Seattle to Charlotte for my cousinโ€™s wedding. Already stressed โ€˜cause my dress didnโ€™t fit right and my plus-one bailed last minute. So yeah, I was hoping the flight would at least be chill.

Nope.

The kicking started before we even took off. Just little thumps at first, like someone shifting around. I gave it a pass. But then it turned into this rhythmic tapping. Like clockwork. I glanced back, expecting a kid. Nope. It was a grown dude. Probably late 20s, hoodie up, AirPods in, completely zoned out.

I did the polite lean-back-and-smile move. Nothing. Then I tried the half-turn with a firm โ€œExcuse me?โ€ Still nothing. He just blinked like I interrupted his audiobook or whatever.

Flight attendant came by with drinks, so I casually mentioned it. She nodded like sheโ€™d handle itโ€”but when she spoke to him, all he did was shrug and say, โ€œWasnโ€™t me.โ€ Like I didnโ€™t know what the back of my own seat felt like.

It kept happening. And hereโ€™s the kicker (no pun intended)โ€”the guy in the window seat next to him? Looked real uncomfortable. Kept side-eyeing him like he knew something but didnโ€™t want to get involved.

About an hour before landing, I couldnโ€™t take it anymore. I stood up, turned around fully, and saidโ€”louder than I meant toโ€”โ€œCan you seriously stop?โ€

Thatโ€™s when window-seat guy suddenly blurted something out that made my stomach drop.

He said, โ€œHeโ€™s having withdrawals.โ€

The whole row went quiet. Even the guy behind me, the kicker, looked up like he wasnโ€™t expecting that to be said out loud.

I was confused. โ€œWithdrawals from what?โ€ I asked, my voice way softer now.

โ€œPills,โ€ window-seat guy whispered. โ€œHe told me before we boarded. Said he lost his bag, and heโ€™s trying to tough it out.โ€

Now, Iโ€™m not gonna lieโ€”I felt a mix of emotions. First was guilt. Then a weird kind of fear. And then frustration again, because none of this explained why he had to kick my seat to cope.

Still, I sat down and stayed quiet for a bit. Iโ€™m not heartless. I get that addiction is real and messy and complicated. But dang, all I wanted was to get to Charlotte in one piece without my spine being used as a drum set.

A few minutes later, the same flight attendant walked by again. I pulled her aside and quietly told her what the guy next to the kicker had said. She nodded, eyes serious, and went to the back. A few minutes later, another flight attendant came and crouched down beside the guy. She spoke calmly, clearly trained for situations like this. He finally admitted he was detoxing and hadnโ€™t slept in two days. Said he was on his way to stay with his sister in Concord, trying to clean up his life.

I sat there, staring at the seatback in front of me, unsure what to do with all of that.

Then something weird happened. He tapped my shoulder. Gently. I turned around, bracing for who-knows-what.

โ€œIโ€™m sorry,โ€ he said. Quiet. Honest. โ€œDidnโ€™t mean to take it out on you.โ€

And I believed him.

His name was Eron. Not Erin. Eron. He told me that when we landed, while we were all waiting to deplane. Said heโ€™d been clean for three weeks, but losing his meds and being stuck in an airport all night had nearly broken him.

The window-seat guy, whose name was Vincent, helped him carry his bag off the plane. Eron shook my hand before he left and said, โ€œThanks for not losing it completely on me. I wouldnโ€™t have blamed you.โ€

I donโ€™t know what happened to him after that. But I think about him sometimes.

The truth is, we never really know what the person next to us is going through. I was wrapped up in my own stressโ€”wedding stuff, heartbreak, whatever. But that guy? He was just trying to survive the day.

It doesnโ€™t mean what he did was okay. But sometimes it helps to pause before reacting too hard. You never know when someone might just need a little patience instead of a meltdown.

I still flinch when someone taps my airplane seat. But now, I think twice before assuming theyโ€™re just being rude.

You never know.

If this made you think twice too, give it a like or share. We need more grace in the skiesโ€”and everywhere else.