Anonymous wrote:OP here... to all of the responders saying you need to know so you would know how much to clean or what to serve, I am not talking about going to someone's home. I am talking about people using this as casual chatter at the playground. No food is being served. And for those who say severities vary, maybe but you also cannot say when or where an allergy can become more severe. My DC was previously able to go inside middle eastern restaurants and one day, we went inside to buy tamarind juices and he started getting hives just from sesame being in the air. It is not a think that is set and stays, it is always changing. That is why you should always be vigilant and never treat allergies flippantly which is what I feel people asking about severity are trying to do.
Anonymous wrote:"her reactions are considered potentially anaphylactic so she cannot consume any. Airborne exposure is [an issue, not an issue]."
That's all they're trying to find out. I have a kid with complex allergies so I do get feeling sensitive--but at the same time, how much detail do you expect them to ask without it feeling like prying? They're opening the door for you to clarify exactly what the needs are ... which about 100x better than someone being like "yeah yeah gotcha" and not taking it seriously.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So you bring up his allergies in settings where he's not going over someone's house and then get offended when someone asks more questions? Just don't bring it up.
My kid's allergies are environmental, not food, but sometimes they come up. For example, when my kid was younger and certain outside activities would trigger asthma bad enough to need oral steroids and possibly the ER, and people would invite us to the pumpkin patch or whatever, I'd explain so the conversation didn't end up with them suggesting multiple dates, and trying to talk me into the idea that pumpkin patch is fun, I'd say "He's allergic to the mold in hay, would you want to meet up for swimming at the indoor pool?" Then people would ask me if I'd tried Benadryl, as if I might not have heard of it. This is for a kid on 6 daily asthma/allergy meds, who had still had multiple ER visits and hospital stays before he turned 2.
I can imagine that allergies are coming up in natural conversation for OP too. Maybe someone offered her kid a snack, and she told them he can't share food. Maybe someone asked if her kid liked a certain food. Maybe she had a conversation with her kid about why he couldn't take an offered food.
Anonymous wrote:So you bring up his allergies in settings where he's not going over someone's house and then get offended when someone asks more questions? Just don't bring it up.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They are trying to figure out if they need to do something unusual to keep your kid safe, like wash hands after handling an allergen or perhaps not have you over.
For example we simply do not host my nephew with serious allergies because I cannot make my house safe: we go to the park instead. But we do host kids who have the same allergies, just lesser reactions or parents who are ok with exposure.
The setting does not play to your explanation. This is just playground chatter not that we are going into someone's home.
Anonymous wrote:Maybe I am being overly sensitive but when someone asks me about the severity of dc’s allergies, it bothers me.
Two reasons, one because allergies don’t work that way / one time dc could have hives the next time anaphylaxis; two because it just seems flippant like they are trying to minimize things. I just respond with oh it’s hard to tell but it’s best to stay vigilant. One of my dc had anaphylaxis to a food she had eaten many times and this was her first reaction to that food ever. Thank god we already had epi pens for other known allergies but it was very scary so maybe that’s where my sensitivity comes from.
Are others bothered by questions like these or am I just being sensitive?