My Sister Demanded I Babysit Her Kids on a 10-Hour Flight — Her Tantrum at Boarding Was My Reward

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I’ve changed diapers mid-road trip, soothed tantrums at weddings, and played emergency babysitter more times than I can count. But this time? At 30,000 feet above sea level, I finally said no.

I always knew my sister had a flair for drama, but even I wasn’t prepared for what she pulled at the boarding gate of our flight to Rome.

It started with a phone call a week before departure.

She didn’t say “hello.” She didn’t ask how I was. Her message was straight to the point: “Hey, just a heads-up — you’re watching the kids on the flight.”

I nearly dropped my phone.

“Wait, what?”

“Come on,” she huffed, “I can’t juggle them for 10 hours by myself. And let’s be real, you’ve got no one to fuss over.

Meanwhile, I need actual time with James. This trip matters more to me than to you.”

She didn’t wait for an answer.

And that, in a nutshell, is my sister: single mom, recently divorced, emotionally attached to her new boyfriend like he’s a life raft, and somehow always the main character in every room, even on a plane.

Our parents generously invited us to spend two weeks with them in Italy, their first big trip since retiring and relocating to a peaceful villa outside Rome. They even bought all our tickets.

Same flight. Same itinerary. But my sister decided that also meant the same responsibilities for me.

I told her I wasn’t comfortable babysitting mid-air.

“Oh, please,” she snapped.

“Just take the baby whenever I need a break. It’s not rocket science.” Then she hung up.

No discussion. No gratitude.

But what she didn’t know was that I had plans of my own.

And I wasn’t sitting next to her.

I stared at my phone long after she hung up, and my jaw clenched so tight it hurt.

Typical. She didn’t ask — she assigned. Like, I was her built-in backup parent.

Like my plans, comfort, or mental state didn’t matter.

I wasn’t even mad about the flight. I was mad because this was always the pattern. The last time we traveled together, she told me she’d be “right back,” then ghosted for two days at the resort to “recharge.”

Meanwhile, I was stuck wrestling her toddler through public tantrums, diaper blowouts, and a meltdown because his banana broke in half.

That memory alone made my eye twitch.

So I called the airline.

“Hi,” I said sweetly.

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