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Passenger Drinks 80oz on a 3-Hour Flight, Uses Bathroom 4 Times – AITA?

by CTV4
November 17, 2025
in Social Issues

A simple holiday flight turned into a full-blown irritation battle at 30,000 feet. The trip lasted three hours. The mood changed much faster than that.

One passenger focused on hydration. The other focused on sleep. Their needs collided right in the cramped space between a middle seat and an aisle seat.

What started as a routine flight became a slow boil of sighs, groans, and rolled eyes. One bathroom trip felt fine. Two seemed manageable. Four pushed the aisle passenger over the edge.

Every time the middle passenger stood up, the tension grew. Every time the aisle passenger tried to sleep, frustration grew with it. The back-and-forth sparked real debate later.

Family members argued. Readers argued. Everyone had an opinion about manners, bodies, and what counts as reasonable behavior on a plane.

It all began with two large water bottles and one very annoyed flyer.

Now, read the full story:

Passenger Drinks 80oz on a 3-Hour Flight, Uses Bathroom 4 Times - AITA?
Not the actual photo'AITA for using the bathroom frequently on the flight?'

Recently I flew home for the holidays. The flight was three hours long.

I read that you dehydrate twice as fast on a plane as you do elsewhere.

So I packed two 40oz water bottles and planned to drink both of them during the flight. I should note I am a pretty big person and an athlete.

I booked a middle seat because I am on a budget. I also do not care much about aisle or window seats.

I used the bathroom four times during the flight. Each time, the person sitting on the aisle got progressively annoyed.

She was sleeping and I woke her up each time. She would sigh and groan and roll her eyes whenever I got up.

When I used the bathroom the third time, she asked me if I could try to hold it for the rest of the flight so she could sleep.

I should mention it was 4pm and there was no time change involved.

I did not take her request too seriously. I continued to drink water.

When I got up the fourth time, she told me I was rude for ignoring her request.

I told her it was either that, dehydrate, or wet myself, and going to the bathroom seemed like the best option.

She told me no one needs to drink enough to pee four times in under three hours unless they have a bladder issue.

She then asked me if I had a bladder issue. I said no, not that it is her business.

I asked if she wanted to switch seats so I would not have to climb over her. She refused.

She kept pressing me. I suggested we flag down a flight attendant because I did not feel comfortable resolving this on my own.

The flight attendant sided with me. But at home my family disagreed.

Some said I did nothing wrong and that I have the right to drink water. Others said it was discourteous to drink that much on a flight and that I...

So I am wondering if the people of Reddit think I am the [jerk] or not?

This story hits a familiar nerve. Small spaces make small frustrations grow fast. A plane adds pressure to everything. Strangers share armrests, air, and expectations, and those expectations can clash without warning.

The aisle passenger wanted rest. The OP wanted hydration and comfort. Neither goal sounds extreme. The problem sat right between them, inside a tiny row where nobody had much control.

Moments like this show how quickly personal routines bump into other people’s boundaries. One person sees a health habit. Another sees a nonstop disturbance.

This feeling of isolation is textbook in tight travel spaces, where people carry stress, fatigue, and different coping styles.

Now let’s look at the deeper dynamics.

Air travel shrinks personal space to the smallest version of “public life.” Three strangers sit inches apart.
One person’s habits can affect everyone’s comfort. That makes this situation more layered than a simple bathroom dispute.

The core issue here centers on competing needs inside a shared environment. One passenger followed a hydration routine. The other wanted undisturbed sleep. The aircraft created the conflict because neither person could avoid the other.

According to the International Air Transport Association, cabin air keeps humidity at about 10 to 20 percent. This is much lower than most indoor environments. IATA notes that low humidity can increase water loss, but healthy travelers usually manage it with moderate fluid intake.

Hydration matters, but so does awareness of social context. Dr. Jodi DeLuca, a clinical psychologist who studies behavior under stress, told NBC News that crowded travel environments increase irritability because people feel trapped and overstimulated. She explained that even minor disruptions can feel like major threats to comfort and control.

When someone wakes up repeatedly on a flight, the stress builds quickly. The aisle passenger likely felt her rest slip away every time she needed to stand or move. Movement also triggers a chain reaction. Other passengers shift their legs. Items bump around. The entire row wakes up a little each time.

However, experts also highlight that passengers have the right to stand and use the bathroom whenever needed. The Federal Aviation Administration states clearly that no airline can restrict bathroom access except during turbulence or safety events.

The right exists because each body works differently. Hydration levels vary. Bladder capacity varies.
Athletes often consume more water. Anxiety can increase bathroom frequency too. Flight stress also affects digestion and fluid balance.

So the OP acted within their rights. The aisle passenger reacted within human frustration. Both experiences can be true at the same time.

Where things went wrong was the mismatch in expectations. The OP planned a hydration routine that required frequent movement. The aisle passenger expected uninterrupted rest. Neither shared their needs early on, so irritation grew without relief.

Dr. Thomas Plante, a professor of psychology at Santa Clara University, told CNN that conflict in tight spaces reduces when people communicate their needs politely and negotiate small compromises. He explained that early communication can ease tension and prevent misunderstandings.

An approach that blends awareness and courtesy works best. If someone expects frequent movement, booking an aisle seat helps everyone. If someone wants uninterrupted sleep, they might use headphones, eye masks, or choose a window seat when possible.

However, passengers cannot always choose seats. Budget, availability, and last-minute travel affect choices. This means communication becomes even more important.

Actionable advice from therapists who study travel stress often includes small steps. Tell seatmates early if you expect to move around. Offer a seat swap. Create a tone of cooperation. People usually soften when they feel included rather than surprised.

The OP offered a swap. That was a thoughtful step. The aisle passenger refused, which left no easy compromise. At that point, involving a flight attendant made sense. Attendants are trained to support passenger comfort and safety, and they often diffuse tension.

The larger message in this story shows how fast ordinary choices can spark unexpected conflict. Everyone enters a plane with their own needs. The key comes from balancing those needs with awareness for others.

When people communicate openly, even cramped cabins feel more manageable. When communication fails, even a short flight feels endless.

Check out how the community responded:

Many commenters focused on courtesy and insisted the OP acted inconsiderately by drinking so much water while seated in the middle. Several felt the aisle passenger deserved more respect.

AgentAlpo - YTA. Three hours on a plane is not dangerous dehydration territory. If you plan to drink that much, pay for the aisle seat. Sleeping helps some people handle...

TentaclesAndCupcakes - YTA. Once or twice sounds fine. Four times in three hours feels ridiculous. You should have booked the aisle seat if you planned heavy hydration.

Fainora - YTA. If you drink 80oz in three hours, get an aisle seat. If you pee that much, you are not dehydrated at all.

mks221 - YTA. Four bathroom trips in three hours sounds extreme. Most people make it through that long without leaving once. Book the aisle next time.

A second wave of commenters challenged the science. They felt the OP exaggerated dehydration risks and created unnecessary disruption.

superswellcewlguy - Who cares about slight dehydration on a three hour flight? You can rehydrate after landing. Nobody needs 80oz of water during a short flight. YTA for the inconvenience.

ConstaLobo - YTA. You do not get that dehydrated on a flight. You drank more water than people drink in a full day. Why did you think that was necessary?

Educational-Good-652 - YTA. For metric readers, that is 2.36 liters. In three hours. That is excessive and very inconsiderate.

Scrappyl77 - YTA. Your science is faulty. You should have paid for an aisle seat if you planned to p__s every 45 minutes.

Several commenters focused on the middle seat choice, calling it unfair to force repeated movement on the aisle passenger.

PlusBackground9874 - YTA. Eighty ounces of water for a three hour flight feels absurd. You are sitting, not running a marathon. No points awarded here.

whatsmypassword73 - YTA. You chose the middle seat. Then you got up four times. You bothered the aisle passenger repeatedly. Total d! ck move.

This story captures the tension that grows when expectations collide in a cramped cabin.

Hydration matters and comfort matters. But sleep matters too. Nobody wants to feel ignored or dismissed when they ask for consideration, even if the request feels unrealistic.

At the same time, no one should feel ashamed for needing the bathroom. Bodies work at their own pace, and travel only amplifies that.

A good lesson appears here. Share your needs early. Talk to your seatmates. Show openness. Compassion builds smoother flights, even when space is tight and moods are delicate.

So what do you think? Did the OP make reasonable choices for their own comfort? Or did they ignore a clear opportunity to prevent frustration for someone else?

CTV4

CTV4

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