Could you stop kicking the seat?

Ten minutes into our night flight, I realized we’d been assigned the most energetic ten-year-old on Earth.

At first it was little taps… then thumps… then full-on mule kicks to the back of my seat like he was training for a soccer team. My dad turned around politely and smiled.

“Hey buddy,” he said gently, “could you stop kicking the seat?”

The kid froze like he’d been caught mid-crime… and stopped.

For exactly ten seconds.

Then the kicking started again, even stronger, like he took the request as a challenge.

Dad didn’t say another word. He simply pressed the button and reclined his seat as far back as it would go. Slowly. Quietly. With purpose.

A minute later, the boy’s mom leaned forward with an irritated face.

“Excuse me,” she said, “can you put your seat up? My son is uncomfortable.”

Dad didn’t even turn around. “No, thank you.”

The father huffed. “Seriously? This man put his seat down and my wife is uncomfortable!”

That’s when the flight attendant arrived, already wearing the look of someone who had dealt with twenty different versions of this exact situation.

She smiled politely. “Sir,” she said to my dad, “would you like to keep your seat down?”

My dad, calm as a monk, replied, “Yes, please.”

The flight attendant nodded. “Okay. That’s completely within his right.”

The boy’s parents looked shocked—as if the universe had just betrayed them.

Then the attendant turned to the child with the same sweet smile.

“And young man,” she added, “if you kick the seat again, we’ll have to document it, and your family may be moved… or meet us when we land.”

The kid’s eyes widened. Suddenly, he remembered how to sit like a normal human.

Silence.

For the first time all flight, I could actually hear the engine hum and the soft clink of drink carts. My dad reclined, crossed his arms, and closed his eyes like he’d just completed a peaceful yoga session.

About twenty minutes later, the boy’s mom quietly tapped my dad’s shoulder.

“I’m sorry,” she muttered. “He shouldn’t have been doing that.”

My dad opened one eye, smiled kindly, and said, “Thank you. I appreciate that.”

The rest of the flight was so quiet, I almost forgot the kid existed.

And when we landed, my dad sat up, stretched, and whispered to me with a grin:

“Funny… the kicking stopped the second it had consequences.”

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