Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:fun story: My good friends boyfriend was told he was allergic to gluten his entire young life. We were 25 and he decided to get tested. Not even a little bit allergic. I don’t think i’ve ever seen someone so excited to eat bread.
I think it’s possible to grow out of allergies-it happens all the time and I wish people prioritized being aware of how often they test to check. My cousin was also told he was allergic to peanuts and got tested before jointing the army at 18 and was also not allergic (or no longer).
I agree the people who don’t eat gluten for their own personal reasons unrelated to medical issues just need to handle that themselves. That means not requesting special meals at gatherings other people host. Because that’s not a need, it’s a preference.
Parents lie for their own needs. My parents said I was allergic to pets. Was allergy tested multiple times for it and nothing. Got a dog and no issues.
Anonymous wrote:FYI fake GF is actually more real than you think. It is not just allergies or stuff that shows up on tests that counts. Gluten is objectively terrible for many people (IBS, mental health).
Anonymous wrote:I once had a guest at a large party I hosted tell me she was vegetarian. So I made vegetarian options for her. Then she ate the chicken I made. I was like WTF (politely) and she said she always tells hosts she is vegetarian in case she doesn’t like the non-veg that is served.
Anonymous wrote:My kid’s best friend’s family is ethically vegan. They eat vegan at home and pack vegan lunches for him. I always have a vegan option for him when he comes over and he always picks the non-vegan ones! I don’t want to police this child or tell his parents because I don’t know what their rules are, but I’m like…why spend money on vegan snacks when this kid prefers pizza and goldfish?
Anonymous wrote:fun story: My good friends boyfriend was told he was allergic to gluten his entire young life. We were 25 and he decided to get tested. Not even a little bit allergic. I don’t think i’ve ever seen someone so excited to eat bread.
I think it’s possible to grow out of allergies-it happens all the time and I wish people prioritized being aware of how often they test to check. My cousin was also told he was allergic to peanuts and got tested before jointing the army at 18 and was also not allergic (or no longer).
I agree the people who don’t eat gluten for their own personal reasons unrelated to medical issues just need to handle that themselves. That means not requesting special meals at gatherings other people host. Because that’s not a need, it’s a preference.
Anonymous wrote:Whether it is parties or sports, there are so many restrictions. Of course if there is a real allergy like nuts, we should accommodate. There is always some gluten free kid or kids who aren’t even actually allergic to anything.
Our friend once hired a separate chef to cook a GF meal and ordered pizza and other kid food. The GF child skipped all the GF chef food and ate pizza! Every class party and birthday party has an annoying GF kid so I have to look for a GF cupcake.one mom said her kid isn’t allergic and the tests came negative but she still thinks it would be best if child was GF. She would rather starve him than feed the poor kid gluten.
Now I’m ordering food and it is hard to get kids gluten free. End rant.
The people we know with true allergies or real dietary restrictions always tell me not to worry about their child. It is the fake GF people who annoy the crap out of me.