Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I took a Kind bar and a bag of cashews on a flight and was asked not to eat them. There was a child on the plane who was allergic to nuts. I got to eat nothing on a 6 hour plane ride to CA because I have Celiac and nothing they had on the plane was ok for me to eat. But I would rather a child not die! But I will admit all the food allergies are a PITA, especially when they overlap.
Huh? Tell that to a diabetic. I'd imagine the child's parent's had take precautions besides having it announced.
+1 I had gestational diabetes, and the Dr. told me to eat nuts for the protein when travelling.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I took a Kind bar and a bag of cashews on a flight and was asked not to eat them. There was a child on the plane who was allergic to nuts. I got to eat nothing on a 6 hour plane ride to CA because I have Celiac and nothing they had on the plane was ok for me to eat. But I would rather a child not die! But I will admit all the food allergies are a PITA, especially when they overlap.
Huh? Tell that to a diabetic. I'd imagine the child's parent's had take precautions besides having it announced.
Anonymous wrote:I took a Kind bar and a bag of cashews on a flight and was asked not to eat them. There was a child on the plane who was allergic to nuts. I got to eat nothing on a 6 hour plane ride to CA because I have Celiac and nothing they had on the plane was ok for me to eat. But I would rather a child not die! But I will admit all the food allergies are a PITA, especially when they overlap.
Anonymous wrote:They will announce if someone on board has a peanut alllergy
Anonymous wrote:I would. If someone requests that we not eat it, of course I would oblige. But I am tired of pre-emptively worrying about other people's allergies. It's getting kind of out of hand. (There was a long thread recently on not bringing PBJ to a playground, which again, I find to be overkill unless we are lunching with or near someone with allergies.)[/quote
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I would ask that they buy me something for my inconvenience if they ask i dont eat my sandwich or peanut butter crackers or snickers or whatever.
I'm not going through life worrying if every other person is allergic to something I want to enjoy personally and keeping within my own space.
If you're that paranoid about an allergy in a public place than the burden is you and you can isolate yourself in a bubble.