Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Bring in all the nuts you wish. Ideally, we can ship off the nut allergic to an island or something where they are out of the way. Worked for the lepers.
Actually, it might just be their moms we need to ship off somewhere out of the way.
Yes to both. Thank you!
I knew I should have ignored this thread to avoid people like you all. If only you knew how terrifying it is to have allergies. My 10 year old has such fear of food that many times he would rather go hungry than even try. If he touches people who have been eating nuts he gets a horrid reaction. I don’t expect the word to change around him so I am teaching him to be vigilant and trying to train him to never leave the house without medication. But not one day goes by where I don’t get up fearing for his life. I don’t understand how you people cannot have compassion for these children!
BTW if someone goes out of the way to change their menu or bring him something he can eat, he certainly goes and thanks them for their kindness and effort. I pray and hope that he never meets people like you guys in his life. He feels isolated enough.
Kids can work themselves into hives due to anxiety, fyi
(Mom of anaphylactic teenager)
He didn’t have a clue that this person ate nuts. He hugged him and he had a reaction. We figured it out the next morning. It’s different for every kid. You should understand this more than anyone else.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Bring in all the nuts you wish. Ideally, we can ship off the nut allergic to an island or something where they are out of the way. Worked for the lepers.
Actually, it might just be their moms we need to ship off somewhere out of the way.
Yes to both. Thank you!
I knew I should have ignored this thread to avoid people like you all. If only you knew how terrifying it is to have allergies. My 10 year old has such fear of food that many times he would rather go hungry than even try. If he touches people who have been eating nuts he gets a horrid reaction. I don’t expect the word to change around him so I am teaching him to be vigilant and trying to train him to never leave the house without medication. But not one day goes by where I don’t get up fearing for his life. I don’t understand how you people cannot have compassion for these children!
BTW if someone goes out of the way to change their menu or bring him something he can eat, he certainly goes and thanks them for their kindness and effort. I pray and hope that he never meets people like you guys in his life. He feels isolated enough.
Kids can work themselves into hives due to anxiety, fyi
(Mom of anaphylactic teenager)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Cheese is more of a fat than a protein, and peas are not a protein at all. There's no way in hell my daughter would touch beef jerky. As for Beans, really? Do you see a middle school or eating any kind of beans during the school day? I would imagine they would get teased: you know, beans beans they're good for your heart...
You can't really argue that you're eating cashews instead of cheese because cheese is mostly fat. Look at the comparison:
A babybel cheese (just choosing an easy form of cheese that would last in a pocket until snack time) has
60 calories
4.6 grams protein
4.6 grams fat
0 grams of carbs.
60 calories of cashews would have about
2.0 grams protein
4.8 grams fat
3.4 grams of carbs
I already posted above that I think that nuts are fine, as long as they aren't at a desk and the kid uses some reasonable caution, but for a kid looking for more variety cheese is also a good source of protein and fat, both of which a kid needs.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My 6th grader is having some eating issues at school. The dr recommended snacking multiple times a day. Nuts are an easy snack to take and keep in her backpack. I won't send peanuts but by middle school can I send almonds or cashews?
I think you'll need to check directly with your school to determine their policy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Bring in all the nuts you wish. Ideally, we can ship off the nut allergic to an island or something where they are out of the way. Worked for the lepers.
Actually, it might just be their moms we need to ship off somewhere out of the way.
Yes to both. Thank you!
I knew I should have ignored this thread to avoid people like you all. If only you knew how terrifying it is to have allergies. My 10 year old has such fear of food that many times he would rather go hungry than even try. If he touches people who have been eating nuts he gets a horrid reaction. I don’t expect the word to change around him so I am teaching him to be vigilant and trying to train him to never leave the house without medication. But not one day goes by where I don’t get up fearing for his life. I don’t understand how you people cannot have compassion for these children!
BTW if someone goes out of the way to change their menu or bring him something he can eat, he certainly goes and thanks them for their kindness and effort. I pray and hope that he never meets people like you guys in his life. He feels isolated enough.
Anonymous wrote: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?
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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.
I would much rather that my kid's school had a no-nuts policy than my child accidentally caused the death of one of his classmates. I'm *fine* changing behavior if it means keeping kids safe.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If your school allows nuts then Have your child eat in cafeteria. Classroom should be food free. If your need more support than you should make arrangement with school toout to duck out cafeteria to eat an extra snack. Last week a child with a seafood allergy died from the odor so asking classrooms to not have food seems reasonable for kids who have a variety of different allergies even beyond nuts.
Are you sure it was from the odor, and not from ingestion?
Anonymous wrote:If your school allows nuts then Have your child eat in cafeteria. Classroom should be food free. If your need more support than you should make arrangement with school toout to duck out cafeteria to eat an extra snack. Last week a child with a seafood allergy died from the odor so asking classrooms to not have food seems reasonable for kids who have a variety of different allergies even beyond nuts.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Op here—school does not have a policy so I guess I can send them.
You can send them but its a very selfish thing to do and would you want someone to do that to your child if they had a serious allergy. Its not worth the risk. How would you feel if the nuts you sent killed another child? There are plenty of other snacks to send.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Bring in all the nuts you wish. Ideally, we can ship off the nut allergic to an island or something where they are out of the way. Worked for the lepers.
Actually, it might just be their moms we need to ship off somewhere out of the way.
Yes to both. Thank you!
I knew I should have ignored this thread to avoid people like you all. If only you knew how terrifying it is to have allergies. My 10 year old has such fear of food that many times he would rather go hungry than even try. If he touches people who have been eating nuts he gets a horrid reaction. I don’t expect the word to change around him so I am teaching him to be vigilant and trying to train him to never leave the house without medication. But not one day goes by where I don’t get up fearing for his life. I don’t understand how you people cannot have compassion for these children!
BTW if someone goes out of the way to change their menu or bring him something he can eat, he certainly goes and thanks them for their kindness and effort. I pray and hope that he never meets people like you guys in his life. He feels isolated enough.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:^^^i would send her with wipes so she can clean her hands after eating them.
lol, that’s what jeans are for.
Anonymous wrote:^^^i would send her with wipes so she can clean her hands after eating them.
Anonymous wrote:Most people don't need as much protein as those on here are pushing.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My 6th grader is having some eating issues at school. The dr recommended snacking multiple times a day. Nuts are an easy snack to take and keep in her backpack. I won't send peanuts but by middle school can I send almonds or cashews?
Can't answer this but you know those little round cheeses...they are so yummy. We love the gouda. Babybel is the brand.
They are good. And a good snack since they are sufficiently shelf-stable. Not as much protein as nuts, though.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My 6th grader is having some eating issues at school. The dr recommended snacking multiple times a day. Nuts are an easy snack to take and keep in her backpack. I won't send peanuts but by middle school can I send almonds or cashews?
Can't answer this but you know those little round cheeses...they are so yummy. We love the gouda. Babybel is the brand.