
It has become blatantly obvious that the upper echelons of air-travel have improved past all measure, bounding beyond any pre-existing spatial frontiers that may have existed. The days of shared television screens, stiff chairs and supersonic travel are long gone. Although the retirement of Concorde may be regrettable, airlines recognize that most passengers spend more time in the sky, often on long-haul flights. As a consequence expectations have elevated to new heights; fundamentally, we expect our high time to be more enjoyable. Thankfully a quasi proxy war seems to have developed between national carriers, and competing to upgrade all areas to improve overall ambience seems to be the battle tactic du jour. The spoils of war include lie flat beds in business, private cocoons in first, and general ambience upgrades in coach.
Any modern first or business class should provide cabins with ample space to stretch, seats that lie completely flat, and

Air New Zealand’s take on business travel rivals most first class cabins, offering privacy and comfort. Each business passenger’s seat may be swiftly converted into a lie flat bed measuring close to 7 feet in length. Thankfully, with direct aisle-access from every seat, the days of jumping over other passengers are long gone. If you enjoy wine you have most certainly arrived, for the airline boasts the best ‘cellar of the sky’, with over 20 different red and white options. Active Noise Cancellation Technology headsets guarantee remote baby screams are well and truly drowned out.
Although first and business class air travel may only be available to the incredibly wealthy (or senior businessmen), your first glimpse into the finest celestial cabins will most certainly incite envy. Harness this emotion into motivation to earn, for one day you will want to travel like a king, and no one should deny you this privilege.