A mother who thought she was in the right decided that destroying my daughter’s tablet would stop her son’s tantrums.
But what happened next plunged her into a panic she never could have imagined.
Karma strikes fast… even at 9,000 meters altitude!

My name is Bethany, I’m 35 years old, and I never thought a two-hour flight could be so eventful.
My daughter Ella, five years old, and I were seated when the plane started preparing for takeoff.
Ella was thrilled, absorbed in her cartoons, headphones on, her tablet keeping her entertained.
“Are you comfortable, sweetheart?” I asked, tucking a strand of hair behind her ear.
Ella nodded without taking her eyes off the screen. “Could I have some juice later?”
“Of course,” I smiled. “Just let me know when you want to drink.”

When I pulled out a book, I noticed movement across the aisle.
A family of three had just taken their seats: a couple and their little boy, about Ella’s age, already restless and noisy.
“I’m bored!” he grumbled, kicking the seat in front of him.
His mother tried to calm him: “We said no screens during this vacation. Be good.”
The boy’s eyes turned to Ella’s tablet. I sensed this flight would be longer than expected.
Twenty minutes later, the mother, forced into a smile, leaned toward us.
“Hello, I saw your daughter’s tablet. We’ve decided our son won’t have screen time during this vacation, and it’s upsetting him. Could you put it away?”

I blinked, surprised by her boldness. “Excuse me?”She repeated, “It’s not fair to him.”
I took a deep breath to keep calm: “Sorry, but my daughter uses it to stay calm during the flight.”
Her smile faded. “Really? You’d rather ruin our vacation than let your daughter relax?”
“Listen,” I replied, “she’s calm. Maybe your son would be too if he had something to keep busy.”
The woman sniffed disdainfully and gave me a dirty look. I returned to my reading, trying to ignore her. But when the boy’s crying escalated, her hostility remained.
“I want it!” he shouted, pointing at Ella’s tablet.
His mother, in a sweet tone: “I know, dear. Some people are really selfish.”
I tried to ignore the chaos and focus on my book, though the tension was palpable. Ella, unaware, continued her cartoon.
Then it happened. In an instant, the self-righteous mother reached across the aisle and knocked Ella’s tablet to the floor.
Time stopped as the tablet hit the ground and the screen shattered.
Ella’s desperate scream filled the cabin: “Mommy, my tablet!”
The mother feigned shock: “Oh no! It was an accident. I’m so clumsy!”
But her satisfied look betrayed her malice.
“What’s wrong with you?” I whispered.
She shrugged, feigning innocence: “Maybe it’s a sign your daughter uses too much screen time.”
I was about to respond when a flight attendant intervened. The mother immediately played the pity card: “What a terrible accident!”
The attendant looked at us with compassion, explaining they couldn’t do anything on the plane.
I reassured Ella, but true to karma, the story didn’t end there.
Deprived of distraction, the boy raised his behavior to a new level: kicking, tray shaking, constant complaints.
The mother’s attempts to calm him were futile.
“My dear, please stop,” she pleaded.
“I’m bored! This is the worst vacation of my life!”
Meanwhile, Ella, still upset, tugged my sleeve: “Mommy, can you fix it?”

I hugged her: “We’ll fix it when we land. Meanwhile, let’s read together.”
At the other end of the aisle, new drama: the boy, exasperated, spilled his mother’s coffee.
The hot liquid ran over her knees and into her open bag.
Worse: her passport fell to the floor under the boy’s foot, who rubbed it into the coffee stain before she could pick it up.
Panic showed on her face. She picked up the passport, but the pages stuck together and the cover was wrinkled, looking like a soggy piece of toast.
The flight attendant returned, announcing that this damaged passport would cause serious problems at customs, especially since they were headed to Paris.
The self-righteous mother’s panic rose as she desperately tried to fix the damage.

For my part, I couldn’t help feeling some satisfaction: karma had struck.
When the plane began its descent, Ella was calm, flipping through her book, far from the commotion.
“Mommy, can we make muffins when we get home?” she asked with a big smile.
“Sure, and maybe cookies too,” I answered, grateful that the universe sometimes sets things right.
As we left the plane, I cast one last glance at the self-righteous mother, now completely overwhelmed, passport ruined in hand.
It turned out that on this flight, Ella’s tablet was not the only thing that ended up broken.