“I was flying with my 5-year-old, Ella, and she was happily watching something on her iPad with headphones on.
Across the aisle was this boy about the same age, but he kept eyeing Ella’s screen. His whining got louder, and his mom, who I’ll call Entitled Mom (EM), finally tapped me on the shoulder. ‘We’re being responsible and not giving our son any screen time this trip.
Can you put the iPad away? It’s upsetting him.’ I was stunned. ‘No, sorry. My daughter’s calm and enjoying her show.’
EM’s smile dropped fast. ‘Wow, so you’d rather ruin our family trip than take a break from your kid’s precious screen?’ She muttered, just loud enough for everyone to hear, ‘Some parents can’t say no these days.
It’s no wonder kids are spoiled.’ I ignored her, but halfway through the flight, her son threw a bigger tantrum. And then, EM “accidentally” knocked over Ella’s tray, sending the iPad crashing to the floor!
‘Oops, so clumsy of me!‘ she said, smirking. Ella burst into tears, and I was boiling inside, but what could I do? EM acted like it was an accident, playing innocent the whole time.
I took a deep breath and decided to focus on calming Ella down. I figured karma would catch up with EM soon enough. And it did, sooner than I expected.
Not long after the ‘accident,’ her son started gagging.
He had been fussy the entire flight, pulling on the seat in front of him, kicking his tray table, but now he was clearly in distress. His cheeks turned red, and then pale, and he began crying louder, holding his stomach.
“Mommy! My tummy hurts!” he moaned, curling up in his seat.
Entitled Mom’s smug face dropped. “Oh honey, are you okay? What’s wrong?”
Then came the unmistakable urgh—the poor kid vomited all over himself and the seat.
It was a mess.
Passengers around us started turning away or covering their noses. A flight attendant rushed over with towels, gloves, and that professional calm you only develop when you’ve seen everything mid-air.
The smell was awful, and Entitled Mom looked like she didn’t know where to begin.
I had tissues in my bag, wipes, even a clean shirt for Ella that could probably fit her son. I hesitated—because, honestly, I was still angry—but then I looked at the little boy.
He wasn’t mean. He was five. Just a kid, tired and overstimulated. And his mom? Well… let’s just say not everyone gets the parenting memo at the same time.
I got up, handed over my wipes and the shirt. “Here—this might help.”
EM blinked. For the first time that whole flight, she didn’t have a snarky reply.
“Oh. Uh… thanks,” she said, quietly.
The flight attendant helped them clean up. The rest of the flight passed in an awkward, but blessedly quieter, fog. Ella fell asleep in my lap, and I rested my head back, trying to forget the mess of the first half.
As we were deboarding, Entitled Mom caught up to me at the gate.
“Hey,” she started. “I, um, wanted to say sorry. For earlier.”
I raised an eyebrow, waiting.
She took a breath. “I was just stressed. Flying with a five-year-old alone is… hard. He’s been off the walls all week. And seeing your daughter so calm, I guess I got jealous.”
I nodded slowly. “I get it. But blaming other people doesn’t help.”
She looked embarrassed. “You’re right. And I shouldn’t have touched your daughter’s tray. That was out of line.”
I appreciated the apology. It didn’t erase what happened, but it was a start.
“It’s fine. Kids get overwhelmed. So do moms.”
Her son, now wearing Ella’s little unicorn tee (which looked surprisingly adorable on him), gave me a shy wave. “Thank you for the shirt.”
“Take care,” I told them, and we parted ways.
A few weeks later, I got a surprise package in the mail. No return address, just a note inside:
“To Ella and her wonderful mom —
Thank you for your kindness at 30,000 feet.
From a mom who’s still learning.”
Inside was a brand-new iPad case with Ella’s name printed on it in sparkly purple letters. Also inside? A small plush unicorn and a $100 Apple gift card.
Ella squealed in delight. “Mommy! It’s magic mail!”
I just smiled.
Here’s the thing: parenting doesn’t come with a manual. We all stumble. We all snap. And sometimes, we act out of our own exhaustion, fear, or insecurity.
But what matters most isn’t being perfect—it’s how we respond when we mess up.
That mom could’ve doubled down. Instead, she said sorry. And in doing so, she taught her son something far more important than screen limits: how to own a mistake and grow from it.
So, to all the tired, overwhelmed, still-learning parents out there—give each other grace. And don’t be afraid to lead with kindness, even when it’s hard.
You never know who might need it mid-flight.
If this story warmed your heart, please like and share ❤️ Someone out there might be needing a little kindness today.