Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm sorry OP. I totally get it, and I think people who haven't been impacted by tick-bourne diseases may not realize how much they are increasing in frequency, how severe they can be, and how hard it can be to get treatment. The difficulty of getting treatment is maddening, it's almost like gas-lighting by the medical profession. Old thinking (more than 10 years old) on tick-bourne diseases is woefully inadequate for the epidemic we're seeing now.
I have a family member who was bitten by a tick and now is allergic to all red meat. 10 years ago, this was unheard of and people thought developing a meat allergy later in life was impossible.
http://acaai.org/allergies/types/food-allergies/types-food-allergy/meat-allergy
Anyway, those who have said you can be bitten anywhere are right, but obviously you're in a higher risk area/property. I'd recommend 3 months of counseling to see if you can overcome the fear/anxiety and truly feel peace in your home. If not, then I'd sell and move. Anxiety will ruin your life, logical or not, and there ARE lower risk areas.
+1 People are piling on, but back to the initial problem, I'm so sorry about this OP. I hope things improve.
Anonymous wrote:I'm sorry OP. I totally get it, and I think people who haven't been impacted by tick-bourne diseases may not realize how much they are increasing in frequency, how severe they can be, and how hard it can be to get treatment. The difficulty of getting treatment is maddening, it's almost like gas-lighting by the medical profession. Old thinking (more than 10 years old) on tick-bourne diseases is woefully inadequate for the epidemic we're seeing now.
I have a family member who was bitten by a tick and now is allergic to all red meat. 10 years ago, this was unheard of and people thought developing a meat allergy later in life was impossible.
http://acaai.org/allergies/types/food-allergies/types-food-allergy/meat-allergy
Anyway, those who have said you can be bitten anywhere are right, but obviously you're in a higher risk area/property. I'd recommend 3 months of counseling to see if you can overcome the fear/anxiety and truly feel peace in your home. If not, then I'd sell and move. Anxiety will ruin your life, logical or not, and there ARE lower risk areas.
Anonymous wrote:Go see someone about your anxiety.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you move and have a bad pregnancy, injure yourself, get sick, whatever - will you have to move again?
I don't know. I guess that's the problem...obviously you can't live life like that, right? IF the pregnancy were related to something in the environment, maybe? If I lived on a busy street and my kid got hit by a car? Probably. But I don't think we are paranoid about this....we send our kids to an outdoor-based preschool, for instance, and kids there get ticks on a regular basis. We haven't hermetically sealed them in a room or something. You just take the tick down to the town offices for a tick autopsy to see if it carries the disease. It's totally bearable. It's just not...very nice.
Basically, when we moved here from the city, we were making certain sacrifices and tradeoffs: giving up a walkable lifestyle that we knew we loved for a closer relationship with the natural world for us and our kids. So now that we no longer find the natural world to be so lovely to live in and contemplate, are the tradeoffs worth it? It's still safer here with nice kids and schools. You just have to drop your kid in the bath every time they come in from the outdoors. (At least, that's what people recommend. We're still too lazy to quite get on top of it.)
Anonymous wrote:If you move and have a bad pregnancy, injure yourself, get sick, whatever - will you have to move again?
Anonymous wrote:I live in DC and got Lyme! Like IN the city, NE to be exact.
But really this is about more than Lyme. It sounds like you may have realized that you are a city person and this lifestyle just isn't for you. Would a different house in the town nearby be better for you? Is there an area near there where you would feel more comfortable that isn't a country setting?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You can put a 6 foot (or even 8 foot) fence around the perimeter of your property to keep the deer out.
I'm really hoping this is sarcasm. If not, you do realize the ticks aren't actually still attached to the deer when they bite you, right? But once again, I'm really hoping this is sarcasm.
Actually I wasn't being sarcastic. Ticks are associated with the presence of deer. Even though the tick did not jump directly off the deer onto you, the deer did bring it to the area.
I admit my property is much smaller than OP's, but we put a fence around it and never have deer in the yard.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You can put a 6 foot (or even 8 foot) fence around the perimeter of your property to keep the deer out.
I'm really hoping this is sarcasm. If not, you do realize the ticks aren't actually still attached to the deer when they bite you, right? But once again, I'm really hoping this is sarcasm.
Actually I wasn't being sarcastic. Ticks are associated with the presence of deer. Even though the tick did not jump directly off the deer onto you, the deer did bring it to the area.
I admit my property is much smaller than OP's, but we put a fence around it and never have deer in the yard.
We also fenced in our yard. No deer and aside from a random squirrel not other wild furry animals.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You can put a 6 foot (or even 8 foot) fence around the perimeter of your property to keep the deer out.
I'm really hoping this is sarcasm. If not, you do realize the ticks aren't actually still attached to the deer when they bite you, right? But once again, I'm really hoping this is sarcasm.
Actually I wasn't being sarcastic. Ticks are associated with the presence of deer. Even though the tick did not jump directly off the deer onto you, the deer did bring it to the area.
I admit my property is much smaller than OP's, but we put a fence around it and never have deer in the yard.