Whether you prefer window seating, aisle seating or getting stuck in the middle on your next flight, access to the toilet is usually not a common concern.
Reddit users recently posted about how taking a bathroom break has become a problem.
This post came after an obvious incident with a passage seatmate with a toilet response.
Travelers documented the dilemma and shared the methods they needed to leave the queue to take a break in the bathroom during flight.
“In the air I had to wake up to the toilet. A Reddit user wrote, asking if I could go outside and he went for the move.”
The passengers in the middle seat were ready to stand without making a fuss, users said.
However, to the surprise of window seat travelers, the aisle seat passengers were not standing up, offering a surprising alternative.
“As the man in the aisle looked over me, he moved through the gap in front of me,” the user wrote.
This situation has confusing Reddit users.
“The two men in front of me both had laptops open and frankly, they didn't send any other people just because the guy in the aisle was inconvenient,” he said on the trip. Those continued their posts.
Again, the user stated that the obligation is calling and that they need to use the facility. Regarding the climbing proposal, the flyer flushed the idea down the toilet.
“I told him no, I wouldn't. He told me to move again and go around,” the user wrote.
A little bit back and forth, the passengers in the window seat finally put it out, emphasizing the need to use the bathroom.
“I said no, I don't suit me, so you could forgive me,” the traveler added.
“[The] The man in the aisle was clearly very angry that I asked him to move in. ”
“Who's here?” post continued.
Reddit users responded to threads and shared some thoughts on how the situation should be handled.
One user said aisle passengers should have stood up so that passengers in window seats could access the toilet without any problems.
“It is the aisle's responsibility to line up and move for people,” the person wrote.
Other replies imply that they know that aisle seat passengers are part of the deal when they sit there.
One user says they conveniently chose aisle seating, and is understood to be likely that seatmates will need a bathroom break.
“I love the aisles. You can go to the toilet whenever you want. When the centre/window needs to go to the toilet, stretching your legs is a great excuse,” the user wrote.
Others said they immediately replied with the option to climb to use the toilet.
“Yes, come on the guy and just wake up!” user replied in the thread.
According to etiquette experts, if you are sitting in a window seat, there is a way to ask your seatmate to leave the line when you are sitting in a window seat.
Always polite
If you feel the appeal of nature, Pamela Eyring, president of the Washington Protocol School, said Pamela Eyring, who has a location in Washington, DC and Columbia, South Carolina.
“Leave out, smile, get eye contact if possible and ask, 'Are you sorry?' Then you unbuckle and then start standing as a nonverbal movement,” she added.
Then stand up and continue.
“By starting to stand, you physically warn people in the aisle (and the middle) that they need to leave the queue,” Eyring told Fox News Digital. “When you come back, always say “thank you” and smile. ”
Try to allow yourself before or after the drink/food service
The best time to leave the line is right after the seat belt sign is off and immediately after the flight crew has confirmed it is safe to move around the cabin.
“If using the bathroom is an emergency and the seat belt sign is still on, use the call button to summon the flight attendant.”
How to deal with rude plane passengers
Sit down and press the flight attendant button immediately.
“We'll make them mediators and get them out of the matter,” Eyring said.
“If you're not comfortable staying in that line, ask the flight attendant if there's another seat.”





