After twelve exhausting hours, all I wanted on that flight was silence. But behind me sat a seven-year-old machine gun of curiosity—and restless legs. His endless questions became rhythmic kicks that shattered my patience.
When words and warnings failed, I turned around, ready to snap—then saw his wide eyes, full of wonder. “I want to be a pilot someday,” he said.
My anger melted. I told him how airplanes fly, how wings lift, how clouds carry dreams. The kicking stopped. When we landed, the captain let him see the cockpit; his mother cried.
Weeks later, another child kicked my seat. I turned, smiled, and asked, “Excited to fly?”
Because that boy taught me: sometimes turbulence isn’t chaos—it’s just wonder looking for understanding.