Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No, no no... don't do that as its really selfish. There are tons of things they can eat from pretzels to cereal/granola bars, etc. that have no nuts.
What you are saying is ridiculous.
I guess you also feel that hundreds of people on a plane should have to put up with a peacock because one person swears it is her emotional support animal, right?
![]()
What you are saying is ridiculous. A kid with a life threatening nut allergy is not a peacock.
The point, duh, is that the burden is not on the whole world to change its behavior for one individual.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No, no no... don't do that as its really selfish. There are tons of things they can eat from pretzels to cereal/granola bars, etc. that have no nuts.
What you are saying is ridiculous.
I guess you also feel that hundreds of people on a plane should have to put up with a peacock because one person swears it is her emotional support animal, right?
![]()
What you are saying is ridiculous. A kid with a life threatening nut allergy is not a peacock.
The point, duh, is that the burden is not on the whole world to change its behavior for one individual.
Anonymous wrote:OP - I hear ya about the nuts. My child also needed foods like that to manage through the day. It was hard, and especially hard if you have to avoid nuts. I've yet to find a substitute that was as good for him since sunflower seeds (often acceptable) didn't agree with his gut.
Interestingly, he said that at college, there don't seem to be people with serious allergies. He assumes those with allergies are there of course, but has noted that while everyone was very vocal about it when living at home, they seem to be managing without much talk now that they are away.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No, no no... don't do that as its really selfish. There are tons of things they can eat from pretzels to cereal/granola bars, etc. that have no nuts.
What you are saying is ridiculous.
I guess you also feel that hundreds of people on a plane should have to put up with a peacock because one person swears it is her emotional support animal, right?
![]()
What you are saying is ridiculous. A kid with a life threatening nut allergy is not a peacock.
The point, duh, is that the burden is not on the whole world to change its behavior for one individual.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No, no no... don't do that as its really selfish. There are tons of things they can eat from pretzels to cereal/granola bars, etc. that have no nuts.
What you are saying is ridiculous.
I guess you also feel that hundreds of people on a plane should have to put up with a peacock because one person swears it is her emotional support animal, right?
![]()
What you are saying is ridiculous. A kid with a life threatening nut allergy is not a peacock.
Anonymous wrote:Op here—school does not have a policy so I guess I can send them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No, no no... don't do that as its really selfish. There are tons of things they can eat from pretzels to cereal/granola bars, etc. that have no nuts.
What you are saying is ridiculous.
I guess you also feel that hundreds of people on a plane should have to put up with a peacock because one person swears it is her emotional support animal, right?
![]()
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
My middle schooler has a lethal nut allergy.
I know I can’t force you to avoid bringing nuts to school, but for the love of God, teach your child to be aware that some kids in his class can die if they accidentally swallow a tiny sliver of cashew or almond or another nut, or perhaps even have skin contact with nuts. He should not throw them on people for fun, all trash goes in the bin, and please no crumbs on the desk.
And check the school policy.
Please post a link where someone died from having skin contact with nuts. I say this as a mom of a kid with a peanut allergy. It doesn't happen. You must be making your kid ridiculously anxious. OP you should send if nuts if you want to and tell your kid not to share unless your kid knows the other kid isn't allergic.
Anonymous wrote:Pp here. The 2 allergic reaction came from:
A “plain” brownies from a local bakery that we didn’t realize had walnuts in it.
Indian food that we didn’t know had cashews in the sauce.
Again, teach your kid not to share food at school.
Anonymous wrote:I think it depends where the kid is eating them.
Cafeteria? Yes. Outside sitting on a bench waiting for the bus? Yes. Walking between classes, maybe with a wet wipe for afterwards? Yes.
On the other hand, one year in middle school, my kid had a teacher who let the kids eat snacks in class as they had a late lunch. That was kind of her, but they asked for no nuts because the next student sitting at the desk could be allergic. I thought that was a reasonable request.
Anonymous wrote:
My middle schooler has a lethal nut allergy.
I know I can’t force you to avoid bringing nuts to school, but for the love of God, teach your child to be aware that some kids in his class can die if they accidentally swallow a tiny sliver of cashew or almond or another nut, or perhaps even have skin contact with nuts. He should not throw them on people for fun, all trash goes in the bin, and please no crumbs on the desk.
And check the school policy.