
The Greatest Plot Twist of My Parenting Career
I used to think traveling with babies was hard.
The bottles.
The Boppy.
The diapers.
The stroller that folded only if you whispered affirmations to it just right (until I invested in my Yo-Yo’s)
I would like to formally apologize to that version of myself.
Because babies?
Babies were the golden era.
The Baby Era: Small Human, Large Luggage
Babies travel like royalty.
They don’t carry anything but somehow require:
- One suitcase of clothes
- One bag of diapers
- A travel Boppy
- Bottles (plus backup bottles)
- A sound machine that absolutely cannot be forgotten
But here’s the magic:
They stay where you put them.
They don’t fight over the window seat.
They don’t accuse their sibling of touching their elbow.
They don’t demand to switch seats mid-taxi.
You feed them.
You bounce them.
Eventually, they sleep on you or in the bassinet like a tiny warm croissant.
In hindsight? That was luxury travel.
The Toddler Era: Chaos With Legs
Toddlers travel like they’ve had espresso and a TED Talk.
They must:
- Walk the aisle.
- Push the call button.
- Drop snacks under every seat within a 4-row radius.
- Announce loudly when someone goes to the bathroom.
And the second, the exact second, you close your eyes?
“I HAVE TO POTTY.”
Of course you do.
The Kid Era: Now With Negotiation Tactics
Now they pack their own backpacks.
Filled entirely with “stuff.”
Things that are:
- Essential.
- Irreplaceable.
- Absolutely not fitting in the carry-on rules.
Now we negotiate:
- Who gets the window.
- Who sits next to Mom.
- Why Dad is peacefully across the aisle in his own seat living a stress-free life.
- Why one child believes they deserve to stretch across all three seats like they’re claiming new territory.
Legs are cramped.
Someone spills.
Someone is hungry.
Someone is bored.
Someone needs the bathroom the moment beverage service begins.
But eventually?
They sleep.
There’s just a pre-sleep energy burst that feels like a farewell tour before complete shutdown.
And Now… The Survival Guide
After traveling internationally with babies, toddlers, and now children, here’s what actually helps.
1. Give Them a Purpose: Travel Lists
Children love a checklist.
It gives them:
- Ownership
- Responsibility
- A job
Let them check off:
- Their own packing list
- Their carry-on contents
- Even the “Did Mom pack passports?” box (they take this very seriously)
When they feel included, they’re calmer.
Not perfectly calm. But noticeably calmer.
Protein Over Sugar (Save Yourself)
Airport sugar highs are not for the weak.
We bring:
- Beef jerky sticks (they gnaw on these like wilderness survivors)
- Trail mix (grocery stop before airport)
- Veggie packets
Yes, the veggies go first. On purpose.
They don’t keep well — and if they’re hungry enough in the airport, they’ll eat them before spotting a cinnamon roll the size of their head.
My backpack used to carry bottles.
Now it carries:
- Kid snacks
- Husband snacks
- Backup snacks for when everyone “wasn’t hungry earlier”
Three Hours Early. Minimum.
For international travel? Three hours. No less.
This allows time for:
- Bathroom break #1
- Coffee break (critical)
- Bathroom break #2
- Security line surprises
- Actual food that isn’t just gummies and regret
Nothing amplifies sibling conflict like sprinting to a gate while someone suddenly remembers they have to pee.
We do not rush airports.
We arrive. We settle. We hydrate. We snack responsibly.
Accept the Pre-Sleep Chaos
Yes, my kids sleep on flights.
But before they do?
It’s a surge:
- Aisle walks
- Last-minute snack requests
- Seat negotiations
- Bathroom trips timed with surgical precision
And then…
Silence.
And in that silence, I sometimes think about the baby days.
The Boppy. The bottles. The simplicity.
But now they remember the trips.
They talk about them.
They argue about who sat where in 2022.
And that? That’s the good stuff.
Final Thoughts: The Truth About Traveling With Kids
Babies come with baggage.
Kids come with opinions.
Babies need bottles.
Kids need negotiations.
But they also carry memories now.
And one day, they won’t fight over the window seat.
They’ll just remember that they had one.