A flight attendant says this is the biggest mistake travelers make when boarding
- CiCi has worked at a major airline as a flight attendant for the last five and a half years.
- From poor packing to missed flights, she's seen passengers make all types of mistakes.
For every flight CiCi works as a flight attendant, she can always expect passengers to step onto the plane distracted.
Whether it's AirPods blasting music or a TikTok video a traveler can't take their eyes off of, CiCi said she's always encountering passengers who aren't paying attention.
CiCi, who asked Insider to omit her full name and the airline she works for, for privacy reasons, said distracted passengers can cause injuries, anger fellow passengers, and delay the boarding process.
"If you're playing on your phone or listening to music, you can't communicate with the people around you," she told Insider. "And that's where I see a big problem."
Distracted passengers can lead to injuries and delays
CiCi documents travel tips she's learned through her job as a flight attendant on TikTok and Instagram under the username @cici.inthesky.
On her platform, she also encourages every passenger who steps onto a plane to be focused and aware of their surroundings.
"When you're boarding a plane, you are doing a task and you should be focused on that task," she said.
CiCi said time and time again, she sees passengers mistakenly bumping into fellow passengers, hitting their backpacks against another traveler, or swinging their water bottles and hitting a seated person's head.
The result of this is often an injury. And even if it doesn't cause an injury, it typically results in an angry passenger, CiCi said.
According to the flight attendant, another outcome of distracted passengers is traffic jams. A person looking at their phone often doesn't realize another passenger is backtracking to their seat, CiCi explained.
"People get to their seat and realize they don't have a place for their bag, so they have to go a couple of rows back. Well, the distracted person that's behind them is following them very closely," she said.
So when the passenger puts their bag away and turns around to go back to their seat, there's a pile-up, CiCi said.
If the distracted traveler was paying attention and communicating with the other passenger, CiCi said they would've realized they needed to pause and wait to let the person put away their belongings and get situated.
CiCi encouraged travelers to take out their earbuds and put away their phones while they board. She said this would make boarding faster and create an overall happier airplane cabin.
CiCi said she's seen a rise in distracted passengers
In the past few years, CiCi said she's seen a striking incline in distracted passengers. She hypothesizes that it's a coping mechanism to combat the stress that flying often entails.
"People will put their earbuds in, they'll withdraw themselves because they're stressed, they're anxious, and maybe they have a fear of flying," she said.
CiCi acknowledged that these are legitimate challenges many passengers face, but she encouraged travelers to hold off on withdrawing until they've reached their seats.
On TikTok and Instagram, CiCi shares other ways passengers can cope and manage their stress and anxiety.
For example, she said travelers should sit close to the wing where there's less air turbulence, let the flight crew know that they're anxious, and use noise-canceling headphones once they've reached their seats.