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How Airline Passenger Push Each Others' Buttons

Originally published by Christopher Elliott on LinkedIn: How Airline Passenger Push Each Others' Buttons

Airline passengers are pushing each other’s buttons more than ever, mostly because there are more buttons than ever to push -- literally.

Consider the in-flight reading light, which seems like the last thing anyone would fight about on a plane. Yet in a recent online chat, I made the mistake of suggesting that on an overnight flight, it might be polite to ask your seatmate whether it’s okay to leave the light on. You know, just as a courtesy.

Nonsense, readers fired back. It’s your light. You paid for the ticket. You can do whatever you want with the light. Besides, ever heard of an eye mask?

Do air travelers ever fight over their lights? Actually, they do. A few years ago, authorities arrested a passenger on an Alaska Airlines flight from Honolulu to Washington State’s Bellingham International Airport after he became embroiled in a loud argument with his seatmate over her light. She wanted it on; he wanted it off.

Related post: What you have to know before you fly.

That’s not the only button passengers can push. The flight attendant call button, for example, is a long-standing source of annoyance, both to passengers and crew members. Add to that the seemingly endless series of buttons on your in-flight entertainment system and seats wedged closer together than ever, and you have all of the ingredients for an unwanted confrontation.

“There’s a blurred line between what is acceptable and what’s irritating,” says Diane Gottsman, an etiquette expert and the owner of the Protocol School of Texas. “It really depends on which side of the seat you are sitting on.”

Let’s start with the flight attendant call button, which Maigen Thomas, a former flight attendant, refers to as an “ancient torture device.”

“Pressing the call button multiple times in quick succession will ensure the swift arrival of a terse grand dame in polyester-wool blend who will assume that you or someone near you is having a heart attack,” she says.

Indeed, flight attendants use the call button to communicate with each other, and three quick presses of the button puts them on high alert.

“Essentially, you’re shouting ‘Help!’ ” she says. “If it turns out to be your child pressing the button because it’s a fun game to see the flight attendants storming down the aisle, get it together and make them stop. It’s a plane, not a video game. Bring crayons and a coloring book. Or duct tape. Whatever works.”

Okay, then. Something to remember for my next flight.