AITAH for refusing to sit next to my sister (26F) and her husband (27M) on the plane?
A 23-year-old woman booked her own flight seat to avoid being wedged in the middle between her larger sister and brother-in-law during a four-hour trip to a destination wedding. The sister had insisted on reserving all tickets together, joking about fighting for aisle and window while assigning the middle by default. Sensing the real motive—using her slimmer frame as a buffer—the woman secured an aisle near the front with the window already taken.
The move sparked fury: her sister accused her of selfishness and fat-shaming, while their mother urged her to “suck it up” for family harmony. What started as logistics exposed raw tensions over comfort, autonomy, and unspoken body issues.

‘AITAH for refusing to sit next to my sister (26F) and her husband (27M) on the plane?’
Family travel plans quickly centered on seating strategy.





Past conversations revealed the couple’s usual tactic.



The solo booking triggered immediate backlash.






Airplane seats are fixed; personal space is not negotiable for family peace. The younger sister’s reservation shields her body from four hours of physical abuse, while also exposing a common travel alternative—using thinner companions as buffers. What complicates the story is the overlapping emotional layers: Laura’s hurt feelings and her mother’s guilt reshape a physical boundary into denial.
Opposing perspectives may emphasize sibling loyalty, but comfort is not zero-sum; airlines sell extra seats precisely for overcrowding. Socially, this reflects the avoidance of conversations about weight, where indirect tactics replace honest solutions like buying extra seats. Expecting a smaller person to tolerate discomfort to compensate for someone else’s feelings teaches entitlement, not empathy.
As travel etiquette expert Jacqueline Whitmore says in her book Poised for Success, “Politeness begins with respecting personal space; no passenger owes their comfort to the integrity of another.” The younger sister’s quiet departure from the shared seat respected that principle without conflict.
Here’s how people reacted to the post:
Most users praised the booking maneuver and rejected guilt over body size.







A few acknowledged the sensitivity while upholding the right to choose.

![[Reddit User] − NTA tell your mum you never once said or implied that and that Laura made it clear you’d be stuck with the middle seat. That you are...](https://en.aubtu.biz/wp-content/uploads/2025/11/wp-editor-1762478637857-2.webp)





Witty replies highlighted the double standard with humor.




The traveler secured her own comfort without commentary on anyone’s body, earning widespread validation for sidestepping manipulation. The fallout revealed how quickly practical choices get labeled personal attacks when insecurities are involved.
Should family members ever be expected to sacrifice physical comfort for emotional harmony? How can couples who need extra space travel graciously without leaning on relatives?
