The airport gate was buzzing with the usual pre-flight murmurs and the occasional updates over the intercom.
It was early afternoon, just past 2 PM on a weekday, and the afternoon flights were trickling in passengers and shuffling out others like me.
I stood near gate 14, holding my first-class boarding pass for the long haul back home after a tense week of meetings.
When the attendant told me I needed to switch to economy, it wasn’t just an inconvenience; it was a jarring moment that didn’t sit right.
My fingers tightened reflexively around the card, feeling a strange mix of disbelief and discomfort, like something was off but I couldn’t fully place it.
“You’ll need to switch to economy,” they said.
There was no rush call, no clear reason given—just a polite but firm directive that I should downgrade.
It left a sour thread in my mind that I couldn’t let go of, even as I moved with the crowd toward the economy section.
My life these days was a delicate balance of high-stakes business deals, managing a growing team, and constant travel that shredded any semblance of routine.
I woke before dawn most days to check emails, carved out time for quick calls between meetings, and juggled home life with the pressure of proving myself in a role few looked at twice.
