3Gsandme
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Jan 18, 2013
- Messages
- 1,565
If me or my child had such a severe allergy that someone 15 rows back eating a granola bar would endanger my life, I would not be getting on a plane. I agree that I would not place my trust with strangers to keep us safe.
But there's the rub. You don't have to deal with a life threatening allergy so it's easy to say, in theroy with nothing at stake, that you just wouldn't fly.
My eldest dd has a class six peanut allergy. Her first reaction was at 18 months old. The very first time she ever ate anything with peanuts in it her eyes swelled shut. She's now fifteen and a half and through careful diligence and HELP FROM OTHERS, she made it all the way to and through desensitization without ever even needing an epipen. People who have never dealt with a serious food allergy always make the super helpful suggestion to "stay home". Thanks. That's useful.
Seriously, our job as parents of kids with allergies is to help them learn how to manage it and keeping them at home to avoid a reaction just isn't living. I don't want to ask you for help. Trust me. I know how some people feel about accommodating people with serious food allergies. My favorite were the people who referred to kids with peanut allergies as "peanutards" and figured that it would just be natural selection if a reaction killed them. Do you think I want to ask people for help knowing othrts feel that way? I do not. But, I have to. We worked hard to minimize impact on others with dd's allergies.