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PRIVACY

Why rawdogging a flight is the perfect way to bookend your holiday

It sounds ruder than it is, and experts say it could be beneficial for your mental health

A young woman day dreaming while looking through an airplane window at sunset.

Consider the situation: you're on board an eight-hour flight to New York, buckled in, and realise that the in-flight entertainment system isn't working. You've also forgotten to pre-order your vegetarian meal, and your phone, laptop, or tablet battery is completely drained.

To make matters worse, the flight leaves in the morning, meaning you can't simply snooze through the entire journey. For most holidaymakers, being trapped in the air for a protracted period with no form of diversion could incite panic.

However, a new cluster of regular flyers is purposefully opting out from any kind of engagement during flights. This trend, dubiously named 'raw-dogging', is rapidly spreading across social media platforms at a pace comparable to a Concorde.

Disconnect and zone out

Once you get past the misleadingly sexual overtones associated with the term (rest assured, this trend has nothing to do with illicit activities in the airplane restrooms), the act itself is anything but thrilling. Quite the reverse, actually.

Adopting a similar approach to a Buddhist monk entering a Zen-like meditative state, participants achieve a tranquil ecstasy by disconnecting, zoning out, and empty-gazing into the void.

Strangely, this peculiar act appears to be predominantly popular among men. According to GQ, the movement was spurred on by a post shared by West, a 26 year old Londoner, who boasted about his experience spending seven hours of flight time staring at the seat screen map.

"Anyone else bareback flights? " he wrote. Addressing requests from curious followers asking for more insight into the practice, he's since shared additional explanatory 'raw flight' videos, including a 21-hour barren stint from London to Perth.

The supreme challenge