Archive: https://archive.today/mZkxv
From the post:
>“Do you smell that?” Florence Chesson was asked by a fellow JetBlue flight attendant as they prepared for landing in Puerto Rico.
Chesson, as trained, inhaled a lungful of air through her nostrils in a single deep breath. “It smells like dirty feet,” she told her colleague.
Instantly, she started to feel like she had been drugged, Chesson said in an interview.
About an hour later, the aircraft had landed, loaded a fresh group of passengers and was back in the sky returning to Boston. As Chesson wrapped up the drinks service, a colleague rushed past to the back of the plane, her hands around her throat, complaining she was struggling to breathe before starting to vomit. Another was given emergency oxygen.
Archive: https://archive.today/mZkxv
From the post:
>>“Do you smell that?” Florence Chesson was asked by a fellow JetBlue flight attendant as they prepared for landing in Puerto Rico.
Chesson, as trained, inhaled a lungful of air through her nostrils in a single deep breath. “It smells like dirty feet,” she told her colleague.
Instantly, she started to feel like she had been drugged, Chesson said in an interview.
About an hour later, the aircraft had landed, loaded a fresh group of passengers and was back in the sky returning to Boston. As Chesson wrapped up the drinks service, a colleague rushed past to the back of the plane, her hands around her throat, complaining she was struggling to breathe before starting to vomit. Another was given emergency oxygen.
(post is archived)