I donโt care how zen you think you areโsomeone kicking the back of your seat nonstop on a five-hour flight will test every nerve youโve got. I was flying from Seattle to Charlotte for my cousinโs wedding. Already stressed โcause my dress didnโt 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 โExcuse 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 sheโd handle itโbut when she spoke to him, all he did was shrug and say, โWasnโt me.โ Like I didnโt know what the back of my own seat felt like.
It kept happening. And hereโs the kicker (no pun intended)โthe guy in the window seat next to him? Looked real uncomfortable. Kept side-eyeing him like he knew something but didnโt want to get involved.
About an hour before landing, I couldnโt take it anymore. I stood up, turned around fully, and saidโlouder than I meant toโโCan you seriously stop?โ
Thatโs when window-seat guy suddenly blurted something out that made my stomach drop.
He said, โHeโs having withdrawals.โ
The whole row went quiet. Even the guy behind me, the kicker, looked up like he wasnโt expecting that to be said out loud.
I was confused. โWithdrawals from what?โ I asked, my voice way softer now.
โPills,โ window-seat guy whispered. โHe told me before we boarded. Said he lost his bag, and heโs trying to tough it out.โ
Now, Iโm not gonna lieโI 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. Iโm 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 hadnโt 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.
โIโm sorry,โ he said. Quiet. Honest. โDidnโt 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 heโd 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, โThanks for not losing it completely on me. I wouldnโt have blamed you.โ
I donโt 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 stressโwedding stuff, heartbreak, whatever. But that guy? He was just trying to survive the day.
It doesnโt 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 theyโre 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 skiesโand everywhere else.





