Plus-Size and Proud, Sarahs Mission to Make Travel Inclusive for All

The seatbelt clicked shut, but Sarah could feel every pair of eyes on her. It was supposed to be a routine flight — Chicago to Denver, two hours tops — but the woman in the aisle seat sighed audibly as Sarah settled in. A man across the row muttered under his breath, “Maybe she should’ve bought two seats.”
Sarah smiled tightly, but the sting was real. She’d faced these comments before, in airports, on buses, in hotel lobbies. Traveling while plus-size often meant navigating not just physical spaces but also people’s silent (and not-so-silent) judgments.
Still, this time was different. This time, instead of shrinking under shame, Sarah decided she’d had enough.
When the flight landed, she pulled out her phone and typed a raw, unfiltered post:
“Today I was judged for taking up space. But I refuse to apologize for existing. Every body deserves to see the world — and fit in it.”
Within days, her post exploded. Thousands of people commented — some to thank her for saying what they’d always felt but never voiced. Others shared their own stories: broken airplane seatbelts, hotel robes that didn’t fit, tours that “didn’t have sizes over XL.”
That was the moment Sarah realized this wasn’t just about her. It was about everyone who’d been told — directly or indirectly — that they didn’t belong.
Sarah Mitchell, 33, had always loved to travel. Growing up in a small Ohio town, she used to mark dream destinations on a map with tiny stickers — places like Iceland, Morocco, and Japan. But when she finally had the means to start exploring in her late twenties, reality hit hard.
Travel, she learned, wasn’t designed for bodies like hers.
She was stared at in airplane aisles, handed seatbelt extenders with pitying smiles, and once, asked by a stranger to “please not lift the armrest.” On a group hike in Portugal, a guide told her, “We might have to go slower for you.”
That comment stayed with her — not because of the words, but the assumption buried inside them.
So instead of letting embarrassment swallow her whole, Sarah turned her frustration into purpose.
“I realized if I was going to keep traveling, I had to do it on my terms,” she said later. “And I wanted to help others do the same.”
She launched a blog called The Big Explorer, where she began documenting her trips honestly — the good, the awkward, and the infuriating. She wrote about seatbelt extenders without shame. About snorkeling in Hawaii and learning to love her body in a swimsuit. About confronting hotel staff who assumed she couldn’t go zip-lining.
Her tone was sharp, funny, and real. Readers connected instantly.
One of her first viral posts was titled ‘Yes, I Fit on Airplanes — Stop Asking.’ In it, she explained the small hacks she’d learned: booking an aisle seat, calling airlines ahead to request seatbelt extenders discreetly, choosing tour companies that explicitly state their inclusivity.
But beyond the practical advice, Sarah’s message was simple: You are not the problem. The system is.