Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:One of my kids has bad allergies too. We’ve learned that we simply can’t eat things like that when we go out. Samples are NEVER safe. The person handing them out has no idea. Epipens don’t always work, or aren’t enough.
Your son needs to learn that anything he or his parents didn’t cook should be treated with suspicion and probably avoided.
Having said that, your DH is awful and I’d be furious too. You do need to protect your son from him. He cannot blindly trust his father. It’s sad, but blindly trusting his father could cost him his life.
+1
I'd be very mad at him, too.
How did your son live to see 13 with him as a father?
Have a blunt convo with your son, remind him of the three instances when his dad's negligence nearly killed him, and tell he he must look out for himself. It's unfair that the 13 year old must be held to a higher standard of responsibility than his adult father, but such is life.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:While I agree that OP's son needs to be responsible for his allergy, at the same time, that's no excuse for his father not to help with reinforcing the responsibility. The father should be modeling the right behavior for his son and that he isn't is beyond ridiculous. 13 year olds may still need some coaching and reinforcement, especially when their lives are at stake! OP's husband is an ass.
OP here.
Thank you for articulating what I feel. I'm guessing a couple of PPs before you don't realize that a 13 year old is still young and immature. My son has inattentive ADHD and while he has taken temporary responsibility for himself when he knows he's on his own, like at a birthday party, it's easier for him to rely on us when we're together, because the ADHD makes it hard for him to focus and multitask.
I find it just too sad for words that I have to protect him from his own father and tell him: "Remember to ask Dad whether there are any nuts when he hands you food." It's not even food DS grabs for himself - he would remember to ask in that situation. Sigh.
Completely agree. Surprised that so many PPs completely missed the mark on this one. Sounds like your husband is unwilling to take any responsibility for basic food safety for your son. I'm really not sure I could live with that.
Anonymous wrote:One of my kids has bad allergies too. We’ve learned that we simply can’t eat things like that when we go out. Samples are NEVER safe. The person handing them out has no idea. Epipens don’t always work, or aren’t enough.
Your son needs to learn that anything he or his parents didn’t cook should be treated with suspicion and probably avoided.
Having said that, your DH is awful and I’d be furious too. You do need to protect your son from him. He cannot blindly trust his father. It’s sad, but blindly trusting his father could cost him his life.
Anonymous wrote:Wow, I’m amazed at the people here who think a 13 year old has complete responsibility for s life-threatening situation, while absolving his adult father of any responsibility.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:At 13 your son is old enough to be of equal blame as dh
Yes, when he's with friends or other relatives. But he's not to blame for trusting his own father.
Now, going forward, your son knows to ask his dad if food has nuts.
Anonymous wrote:At 13 your son is old enough to be of equal blame as dh
Anonymous wrote:I take it your husband has adhd, too?