Oh, I wish all airlines would do this! Well, really, I wish that there was more room between seats so that if someone in front of me reclined back they aren't impeding on my space. That is maddening.
This is why I use seatguru.com before I buy a ticket or pick seats. Just because you are on an Airbus 320, doesn't mean it is like the last one you flew on, because each airline has seats of different pitches and widths. Seatguru also recommends where on the plane to sit, the drawbacks of particular rows, etc.
What is this sleep you talk of? Best I can manage is a weird fugue/zen state I can't immediately snap out of.
It doesn't bother me much most of the time, but I've been known to politely ask the person in front of me to bring their seat up a little when meals are being served, or I did when meals were still being served.
THIS JUST IN: Different bodies are different!
This is a radical statement of moderation. Extreme in its equanimity.
I have to be pretty clobbered to be able to sleep on a plane.
Reclining by the person in front generally only bothers me if I'm not at the window (which is rare) and actually have to get up because someone else needs to.
I am a non-recliner as it just seems to make my back feel worse. I sit here at my desk with a straight back, too, and generally never lean against the chair's back.
My morning has been spent in research regarding child pornography. Let's hope no one looks at my computer's history.
Baby on the move: [link]
I've been known to politely ask the person in front of me to bring their seat up a little when meals are being served, or I did when meals were still being served.
Every flight I've been on I've been told by the attendant that I had to move my seat back when food or drinks were being served. Usually I don't recline because I hate when the person in front of me does.
My morning has been spent in research regarding child pornography. Let's hope no one looks at my computer's history.
document, document, document.