Not long ago, I found myself preparing for the longest commercial flight on Earth: the nonstop haul from
to New York’s JFK. I would spend 19 hours seated in an aluminum tube, chasing the sun across hemispheres. And while that might not be everyone’s dream, it was firmly on my bucket list—not least because I’d be flying Singapore Airlines, consistently
, which is no small luxury in itself. Still, how does one spend the better parts of a whole day on a plane?
Two days before my flight, an email arrived reminding me to book my onboard meals. “Book the Cook” is the headline act here—a chance to pre-order “white-tablecloth” classics like lobster thermidor or juicy herb-crusted lamb chops. Despite the reminder, I missed the deadline, but I told myself it was better this way; it would give me a clean excuse to size up the standard in-flight menu instead.
—which, let’s be honest, is half the reason you show up early—I faced another fork-in-the-road moment. I chose to skip the live noodle station and walk past the steaming dumpling baskets, even saying no to the free-flowing champagne. Instead, I settled for a cup of herbal tea and a plate of cheese, fruit, and crackers. The SilverKris Lounge in Changi’s Terminal 3 doesn’t make restraint of any kind easy. Not only is it stacked with food, it also has no shortage of nap rooms, showers, and productivity pods. But I claimed a regular seat with maximum natural light in an act of preemptive self-care before surrendering to the cabin’s cloak of darkness.
It was in this corner, headphones blaring with Sabrina Carpenter, that a game plan for my flight clicked into place. Nineteen hours (give or take a generous tailwind) is the kind of number my brain was refusing to process, so I decided instead to break it down into three clean, six-ish-hour chapters. Each of these would have a primary sense of purpose, plus a few supporting acts. Six hours would feel much more doable and probably be a better use of my time than obsessively checking the flight map every 30 minutes. I’d give it a shot.
Business class seats are spacious and comfortable, but the best feature is a pre-made bed that hides behind the seat back.
Sursă: https://www.cntraveler.com/story/how-do-you-spend-19-hours-on-board-a-plane-we-have-ideas
