Post-Tribune

Allergies bring on a rash of restrictio­ns

- By Amy Dickinson askamy@amydickins­on.com Twitter @askingamy Copyright 2021 by Amy Dickinson Distribute­d by Tribune Content Agency

Dear Amy: I currently am wrestling with several serious food allergies.

Lab bloodwork has just revealed an autoimmune disorder. I am scheduled to see a rheumatolo­gist in two months.

My body is thrown into a vicious cycle for weeks after consuming foods that trigger allergies.

What should I do when I get together with friends or family for dinners and they try to make special food for me? I don’t want to risk even trying this food because of past experience­s with bad reactions.

Recently, a host assured me that all of the ingredient­s were safe for me, only to learn later that they’d buttered the pan with margarine, which set off my allergies.

They don’t understand how I have to pay for eating even a trace of that for the next three weeks, but they feel bad because I can’t eat what they eat, and they love food so much that they want to share it with me.

What I prefer to do is bring my own food, but of course people are either very offended or feel so sorry for me that they will try to make something just for me.

What can I say to people who insist I try their food because they made it just for me? I’m tired of being sick and tired of offending people.

— Sick and Tired

Dear Sick and Tired: It is hard to imagine a person with an undefined autoimmune disorder gathering with others for dinner parties during a pandemic, but, in the absence of that concern, you need only know this: You are responsibl­e for your health and well-being. Don’t leave something so important to someone else.

Your question is full of anticipati­on and speculatio­n regarding how others will (or might) respond to your self-advocacy. Don’t concentrat­e so much on how others might pressure you.

The answer is that you must bring your own food to gatherings involving food, because you can only safely eat something that you have prepared. Communicat­e with the host beforehand: “I am on an extremely restricted medical diet because of my allergies, so I need to bring my own food. Will that bother you? I really don’t want to impose, but until I get my diagnosis sorted out, it is vital that I only eat food I’ve prepared myself.”

If you feel pressured, respond, “Sorry, no. I know this is a bummer, and I appreciate your efforts, but I have to be very strict about this.” If your friends and family don’t or won’t adjust to your needs, then yes, you will have to avoid situations where you can’t safely resist this pressure.

Dear Amy: “Conflicted” wrote to you, describing herself as an adopted woman who is hesitant to share news of her birth family connection with her sister. You are right. Birth family relationsh­ips affect everyone in the family.

Both of our children are adopted, fully open with three of their four birth families. Knowing their individual birth families has been a tremendous benefit to both children.

Each birth family seems like another in-law relationsh­ip. Everyone loves a common child, so we have come to love one another.

We have a “family orchard” instead of a family tree: one tree each for my husband’s family, my family, and each of their birth parents’ extended family.

Our kids are the roots, intertwine­d with their birth families, us and each other.

— Fully Open Adoptive Mom

Dear Fully Open: A “family orchard” also describes my own family — and many others.

Thank you for the beautiful imagery. It’s the perfect way to picture the experience of being in a loving, complex, modern family.

Dear Amy: “Afraid Grandma” was franticall­y worried about her grandchild­ren correspond­ing with pen pals, thinking that they might be endangered.

Surely, she is old enough to remember when every year most people received a big directory of everybody’s name, phone number and address? Also known as: the phone book?!

— I Remember

Dear I Remember: Touche! I think it is wise to be careful about any correspond­ence — physical or virtual — but these children had parents close at hand, so Grandma needs to let them parent their children.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States