Flying on an airplane can be stressful, whether people are regular straw billers or not.
The Bounce.com website recently performed a survey asking more than 2000 travelers what they make “uncomfortable or uncomfortable” during a flight, while also determining which airlines are considered as the ‘best’ for nervous straw billers.
The list was created and arranged based on how many passengers considered an experience as ‘uncomfortable’ or ‘uncomfortable’.
More than half of the respondents of the survey (51.60 percent) said that screaming children contributed to their flights. The next highest factor was turbulence at 51.50 percent.
The third highest factor was “loud people around you” at 46.70 percent, while the fourth highest delays were 40.30 percent. The fifth factor was ‘smelly toilets’ at 39.80 percent.
Other factors that contributed to the anxiety of the flight were, among other things: an unfriendly cabin crew, overcrowded corridors, randomly dedicated seats, the cabin is too hot or too cold, busy toilets, too much alcohol served, an intrusive cabin staff trying to sell objects, and strong smelling food.
Bounce.com also used the recording data to determine which airlines make passengers the least ‘uncomfortable or uncomfortable’, and compare large airlines using these factors, each giving a ‘stress-free score’ of a scale of one to 1 to 10.
The best airline for anxious passengers was Singapore Airlines with a stress -free score of 8.94 out of 10, with Bounce calling the broad economy of the airline to give straw perpy more space to sleep or relax on longer flights. The airline also offers meditation cutlists in the flight for people to take their minds of any anxiety-inducing situations around them.
Korean air achieved a stress -free score of 8.82 and Cathay Pacific had a stress -free score of 8.57.
Some airlines – such as British Airways – have offered courses dedicated to ‘with confidence’ for nervous straw billers that travelers learn more about how an aircraft works and other techniques they can use to stay calm on a flight.
For example, the British Airways pilot Captain Steve Allright The independent That many nervous straw billers do not understand how a plane can stay in the air, so he reminded those to take the “fly with confidence” course that a plane flying at 30,000 feet can slip for 100 miles, even if all engines fail.
Allright also noted that turbulence “can be caused by nature and is completely safe because the aircraft is built to withstand even the worst turbulence. If you have the belt on, you are always completely safe,” he insisted.
Another proposal for nervous straw billers is to talk to the cabin crew when they walk on the plane. This includes asking questions if you are unsure of what is happening.