I was carrying my three-month-old baby on a flight home to reunite with my husband when the flight attendant announced that the plane was over capacity. The entire cabin fell silent — until my baby started crying. “Your child is too loud,” she snapped. “You need to get off the plane.” Before I could react, she yanked my baby from my arms and forced me off the aircraft. I was trembling, only able to make one call: “Flight 302… turn back.” Five minutes later,…

I was carrying my three-month-old baby on a flight home to reunite with my husband when the flight attendant announced that the plane was over capacity. The entire cabin fell silent — until my baby started crying. “Your child is too loud,” she snapped. “You need to get off the plane.” Before I could react, she yanked my baby from my arms and forced me off the aircraft. I was trembling, only able to make one call: “Flight 302… turn back.” Five minutes later,…

The moment the flight attendant announced that Flight 302 was over capacity, the cabin went silent—except for the soft fussing of my three-month-old son, Oliver. I shifted him gently against my shoulder to calm him. I was exhausted from traveling alone and desperate to reunite with my husband, Thomas, who had been waiting for us back in Seattle. Before I could fully process what the announcement meant, the attendant—her badge read “M. Collins”—marched down the aisle and stopped right beside my seat.

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