By Martha Williams For Dailymail.Com
14:47 18 May 2024, updated 14:47 18 May 2024
A plus-size travel influencer has claimed she was discriminated against by an airport employee who refused to push her in a wheelchair because of her weight.
Jaelynn Chaney, 27, recounted her experience with a wheelchair assistant on a jet bridge after a recent landing at Seattle–Tacoma International Airport.
‘My ordeal at SeaTac Airport will shock you,’ Chaney, of Vancouver in Washington, said in a TikTok. Chaney, who can walk, then detailed how she requested wheelchair assistance on a recent flight – as she always does.
However, Chaney claims that when she tried to deplane the aircraft, the employee assigned to help assist her started to walk away when she realized she was supposed to help the plus-size woman and not one of the smaller passengers.
The travel influencer said that as the employee walked away with the wheelchair she was making comments about her size. Chaney – who has previously demanded free extra seats for fat fliers subsidized by slimmer passengers – says the ordeal left her gasping for air.
‘Even when I told her I really needed the chair and needed her to let me sit down in it she blatantly ignored me and kept walking,’ Chaney complained in the dramatic TikTok – which showed her walking up an airplane’s aisles aisles.
‘I was then forced to walk up one of the longest jet bridges I’ve encountered and she didn’t stop,’ the 27-year-old continued in her rant.
By the time Chaney was finally allowed to reach the wheelchair and sit down her lips were white, her oxygen levels had dropped and she almost fainted, she claims.
According to Chaney, by assuming that she could walk and not pushing her up the jet bridge – the employee was discriminating against the plus sized woman.
‘Staying silent isn’t an option anymore,’ Chaney said of the ‘discrimination’ she faced. ‘If you’ve faced something similar, you’re not alone.’
She continued: ‘Discrimination is real, and I don’t want anyBODY else to ever experience something like this.’
Users in the comments were quick to show their support for the 27-year-old. ‘I’m so sorry honey,’ one wrote.
‘Sending positivity! No one should be discriminated against for their body or abilities,’ another wrote.
Chaney also used the experience to promote her push for airlines to give free extra seats to fat fliers who may not fit in a standard airplane chair.
She says the ‘passenger of size’ policy afford basic human rights to fat people – but previously conceded that slim passengers’ fares may have to go up to cover the cost of paying for overweight flyers’ additional needs.
This was the travel influencer’s first time traveling without oxygen and uploaded a TikTok documenting the experience.
Chaney uploaded a video to her TikTok channel showing her proudly sitting on a flight without her breathing aide.
She explained to her followers that she’d previously required supplemental air to ensure she could breathe comfortably in the pressurized plane cabin.
At one point in the video, Chaney holds up her seatbelt and smiles as she demonstrates how much it is extended.
Chaney, whose TikTok account has more than 135,000 followers, narrates her concerns as a plus-sized flyer in the background of the video.
Dramatic music plays and Chaney ponders: ‘What if I have a medical emergency on the plane?’
Then she asks: ‘What if I cause an emergency landing?’
But she stops herself and announces: ‘No, forget that. No matter what they say, and no matter what it looks like, travel is for everybody.’
The video then shows Chaney being wheeled down an airport gate and onto the plane.
Then Chaney is shown in her seat, where she exhibits just how much her seatbelt has been slackened.
The TikTok ends with a close-up of the plus-sized influencer’s grinning face.
In her caption, Chaney explains the context of her flight, recounting how for the past four years she has relied on ‘supplemental oxygen’ when flying.
‘It all started back in 2019 after a hospital stay where they suspected I had a stroke,’ Chaney wrote.
‘Turns out, it was pulmonary hypertension, and I needed oxygen therapy ever since. Traveling just wasn’t the same anymore.’
She said that she went ‘from chasing waterfalls in Hawaii’ to ‘everything being so different.’
After conducting intensive research, the influencer struck on portable oxygen concentrators.
‘I shared my discoveries online, thinking this was going to be my new normal.’
But Chaney found portable oxygen concentrators to be ‘no walk in the park.’
She said that using the apparatus was ‘expensive, stressful, and downright scary.’
Her recent flight marked the first time in four years that she had flown sans oxygen concentrator, an experience which made her ‘anxious and afraid.’
‘But guess what? I did it, and it went better than I could’ve imagined,’ she triumphantly wrote.