The Lonely Life of a Food Allergy Mom

There’s one part of every kid birthday party I hate: the food part.

It’s always pizza and cake, and usually my son doesn’t care that he can’t have any. He eats his meal before the party, and I bring his dairy-free, wheat-free, egg-free, peanut-free cupcake in a little Tupperware.

But during the last party we went to, when the pizza came out and all the kids dove in, my son lowered his head, and I heard his little voice say: “I wish I could have some food.”

And my heart broke in half.

Mason is 5 years old and off-the-charts allergic to wheat, dairy, eggs, peanuts, and tree nuts. He’s had the allergies since birth, and they were diagnosed through blood testing, so he’s never actually touched any of those foods. Which means no ice cream, no peanut butter and jelly, no pizza, no mac and cheese, no milk and cookies, no pretty much any common kids’ food you can think of—ever.

He’s my eldest, so I’ve never experienced motherhood without food allergies. Which is probably for the best.

I can only imagine how nice it must be to be able to go places without a bag full of food, because you know you can always “find something.” To show up at a birthday party with nothing but your kid and your gift (and to not stay up late the night before, whipping up another batch of those dang allergy-friendly cupcakes). To send your kid to a friend’s house for a playdate without first explaining to the mom that he probably can’t eat anything in the cupboard—but like no seriously, he could die.

To send your kid to school without Epi-pens and Benadryl and an inhaler and a carefully documented, pediatrician and school nurse approved Allergy Plan, hoping to God that the teachers remember and then diligently monitor his allergies (on top of the 4 million other things they have to remember and do) and that some innocent kid doesn’t randomly offer your kid a cookie or a piece of bread.

People say that food allergies are so common these days. Everyone who hears about Mason’s allergies has a friend or a coworker or a cousin who’s dealing with them, and every teacher I talk to is “very comfortable” dealing with them.

But still, somehow, I don’t know anyone with kids dealing with multiple food allergies. There’s no one else in our family who’s had them, going as extended as you like. And every time I tell someone new about Mason’s situation, I get the same blank, confused expression—like, you’re telling me that perfectly healthy looking kid has never had a glass of milk in his life?

It’s hard for people to understand food allergies, or to take them seriously, because how could something as harmless as a glass of milk—literally every human’s first form of sustenance—be anyone’s kryptonite? How could a kid who doesn’t look sick at all be capable of violent, potentially deadly reactions to such an innocuous thing as food?

It sounds so ridiculous that it’s almost hard for me to wrap my head around it sometimes. After 5 years of extreme vigilance and only a handful of (relatively minor) blips and subsequent reactions, even we are getting a little blasé. I almost let Mason try some fries at a restaurant recently, having no idea what was in them or how they were made, because, gosh, they’re just fried potatoes and maybe it’ll be ok??

But then I hear the stories. About a teenager who died of an anaphylactic reaction to something unexpectedly cooked in peanut oil. About a boy who died after eating at a restaurant on vacation, even though the parents had done their due diligence in discussing the meal with the chef in detail. About a toddler who died after eating something she’d eaten a million times before, thanks to an undisclosed ingredient change in a packaged food, leaving a shattered mother to beat herself up forever for her tiny mistake.

It’s hard because, as horrible and inconvenient and frustrating as food allergies are, they are not cancer. They are not a heart or brain disease. They are not countless other afflictions that might be considered “worse.”

And yet, food allergies come with the same constant, looming fear: the possibility of death. It just happens to be wrapped up in a relatively-healthy-looking package, so that people have a hard time comprehending the severity of the situation or accepting that the threat is actually there. (Which, of course, compounds the danger even more.)

For many food allergy moms, the anxiety is crippling. I’ve read about moms who homeschool because of their kids’ allergies, and who are on anxiety meds themselves just to deal with all the fear. They don’t get babysitters, they don’t go on vacations, they don’t separate from their kids in any way—because who knows what could happen, and God forbid that thing happens when Mom and Dad aren’t there.

One of the hardest parts about the whole thing is that we don’t know what could happen with any particular exposure. Maybe nothing—but maybe everything.

In our case, my son was diagnosed when he was 6 months old and still exclusively breastfeeding, so we have never purposefully fed him any of his allergens. As a baby, he would only nurse for 5 minutes at a time, and then promptly vomit most of it up. I would literally cup both of my hands under his mouth with the burp cloth, after every feeding, and wait.

My doctor smiled and assured me that “babies spit up,” and encouraged me to keep feeding “on demand.” She even managed to explain away my poor baby’s head-to-toe eczema and unrelenting cradle cap, prescribing tub after tub of Aquafor and assuring us that it would pass.

I was a brand new mom and didn’t know any different—I assumed this must be normal.

It wasn’t until we started introducing solid foods and Mason got some hives around his mouth after trying bananas—BANANAS—that our doctor suggested food allergy testing. On a scale of 0 to 100, with <5 being normal reactivity levels, Mason’s tests came back “>100”—literally unreadably high—for a dozen different foods.

I wasn’t devastated, only because I was too busy being relieved to have answers. Finally, I knew why this motherhood experience hadn’t so far been anything like the blissful, breezy experiences my friends seemed to be having. Finally, I could stop feeling like a crazy, paranoid first-time mom.

Finally, I knew how to take care of my own child.

Determined to keep breastfeeding, thinking that my poor allergy baby needed all of the “liquid gold” nutritional help he could get, I dropped those dozen foods overnight. For almost 6 months, until just shy of Mason’s first birthday, I lived on plain roasted turkey, gluten-free granola, a few select fruits…and not a lot else. I forgot food even tasted good—I just had to eat things, a few times a day, that wouldn’t make my baby sick.

It wasn’t hard. Really, none of the things I’ve had to do as an allergy mom have been, relatively speaking. I’m not scheduling surgeries for my son—I’m just swapping out peanut butter for sunflower butter, wheat bread for gluten-free brown rice bread, cow’s milk for coconut milk.

When it’s for your kid, and you know their health and life depend on it, you don’t really think about it—you just do it. After 5 years, I’m pretty used to dealing with food allergies, to the point where the day-to-day work (substituting ingredients, making two different dinners every day) is mostly automated, and it doesn’t take up that much space in my brain anymore.

But still: being a food allergy mom is lonely.

It’s really, really lonely.

It’s lonely being the only mom you know who has to bring cupcakes to parties and have extra meetings with teachers and nurses. Who drives 2 hours twice a year to take her son to a special allergist. Who can’t do “normal” things like swing through a drive-through for the kids’ dinner or take the kids out for ice cream or leave the house without a carefully scripted food plan.

I’m the only mom I know whose son constantly asks, “am I allergic to this?” Whose grocery bill is double what it would otherwise be, due to all the special everything-free alternatives in the cart.

It’s hard watching other moms navigate motherhood without the added stress of food allergies. (Because yes, of course I’m jealous—and of something most moms don’t even recognize as a blessing.) It’s hard swallowing all sorts of emotions when people say things like, “I’m so glad I don’t have to deal with that!”

It’s hard being different, in our society, in general. So on top of the fear of accidental exposure, there’s the fear of bullying and exclusion.

Oh, and then there’s the mom guilt. I’ve spent the past 5 years analyzing my pregnancy with Mason, and coming up empty handed. What did I do wrong? I took my prenatals, I ate relatively healthfully, I exercised, I avoided tuna and deli meat and alcohol and soft cheese.

Still, every time someone asks, “what do you think caused it?” I’m plunged right back into the guilt zone.

To date, we have no idea what causes food allergies. Some people have their beliefs—“it’s all the chemicals in our food” or “it’s that antibiotic hand soap” or “people are just too clean these days”—but my family eats real foods, we use all-natural products, and sure, I like a tidy house, but I’m definitely no clean freak. So why us? Why our son?

Our second son is allergy-free, lucky guy, and I haven’t spent a single second looking back on my pregnancy with him. And now that I’m pregnant with our third, I can only pray that she’ll come out allergy-free as well, for her sake.

But if she does end up with food allergies, at least Mason won’t be so alone.

Because really, most days, it’s it the loneliness that’s the hardest part.

Kim
Kim grew up in Minnesota, but moved to Madison to attend the UW and fell in love with the city’s spirit and culture. She's married with three sweet kiddos - Mason, Joshua, and Leah. When she’s not racing monster trucks across furniture or pretending to be interested in video games, she’s working on freelance writing projects or teaching strength training classes through her small fitness business, Lioness Fitness. Kim's a food allergy mom, which means she can read a food label like nobody’s business. She's also a sucker for good wine, good sushi, a good book, and ANY beach.

46 COMMENTS

  1. We are right there with you. Our 4 year old has a long long long list and ana food allergies. We have started to step our toes into the water of regular life = food allergies. It is scary, but we are doing pretty well so far! I found a private Montessori school that was already Peanut. Tree nut free. (I’m an educator and have fallen in love with it.) There was already several kids in the class with epic pens…hanging on the wall of the 3-5 year old classroom. Our list, the inhaler, the other medications, the risks….they listened…they were nervous, we were nervous. We decided to start half days/3 days a week. We went through the classroom and outside looking for potential problems. The decision was made to only have fruit for snack on our daughters days. We took a deep breath and lingered near by. One week down…you gave her a gummy bear? I know you read the ingredients, but no, nothing that does not come from home! Birthday parties? spontaneous? “Okay here is a stash of her goodies.” Please keep her away from the other kids and make sure they all wash their hands afterward. 5 months so far with no reactions, no breathing treatments, tons of smiles and lots of self advocacy! Oh and as for Birthday parties…we discovered a trick. We found a nut free bakery (I had no idea they existed). I then posted pictures all over fb when a family went out of their way to order a nut free, egg free, milk free, coconut free (the list goes on) cake for out little one! Now lots of friends are doing it! People care, they just don’t know to do it until they see others making it happen and the smile on our faces! Huge hugs! Oh and allergy Moms unite! Start a meet-up group if you can. We were luck enough to have a few Mom’s with older kids make it happen in our community – now it is my turn to plan the food free halloween bash and Easter egg hunt! I know it sucks, but reach out and if there isn’t a community, make one. You got this strong brave exhausted overwhelmed loving Mama!

  2. Wow, that was an amazing read! Thank you so much for this!!!! You seriously tugged at my heart… I really thought I was reading my own thoughts. This is me EVERY. SINGLE. DAY!! Almost to the T. My 3 year old is allergic to peanut, dairy, egg, wheat, beef, pork (cat, dog, & possible environmentals). I’ve suspected it since he was 4 months old (just breastfed) & went to many dermatologists for his skin (he also has allergies/irritations to certain products) & pediatrician/allergist appts until finally he has a reaction at 9 months old to a yogurt melt, they finally did testing. I have developed anxiety, I let no one make food for him, even having some family member watch him is hard bc they don’t get it. They think it’s “no big deal” it’s “just” food. I talk about it ALL THE TIME bc I think it helps me cope with it. We bring food everywhere for him, as well as for me now. Our second son is 7 months old and showed signs basically at birth, got tested and he’s peanut, dairy, egg, and soy so far. I’m not happy he has allergies but was almost relieved they had almost the same allergies to make it a little easier food wise in our home. Just wanted to share a little of my story to know you are NOT alone!!! I feel very lonely as well, especially now that my 3 year old is starting to realize things and asked me the other day if he could have the cake that was at the bday party we were at. But as a fellow food allergy momma, I totally feel for you and understand completely. Thanks again for sharing your story and reminding me as well I’m not the only one out there who is doing this!!! 🙂

  3. This post hit home my 1st currently 11 yrs old had a milk allergy which he out grew and an egg allergy but can handled eggs baked in breads cakes etc… we have been given the ok to try “fresh eggs” but than there’s my 2nd child she’s 9 yrs old highly allergic to wheat contact reactive and also has a dairy allergy. We learned about the dairy allergy by 3 weeks didnt learn about the wheat allergy till about 13 months when my mom gave her wheat crackers we are on a waiting list for a food challenge for the dairy allergy her last trip to the ER by ambulance was for a contact reaction to wheat she didn’t even eat anything but her gluten-free cereal bars she eats all the time a friend had eaten a wheat cereal bar and touched her they were playing around we started with benadryl but when she started having trouble breathing we used her epipen. So my oldest is scared to try “fresh eggs” since he’s seen first hand with his little sister what can happen during a severe reaction so i don’t push the issue it’s one more thing we don’t have to worry about. There school is terrible about handling food allergies and I don’t personally know anyone that handles severe allergies nor anyone that carries epipens everywhere and allergy safe foods.

  4. I just wanted you to know that it does get better, and you are not alone (obviously with all the comments from other mom’s). But also that Mason is not alone. I have several severe food allergies myself (artificial sweeteners being the worst of them, and the hardest to avoid) and it’s difficult with the reading every label, knowing every name for every substance to look for (seriously one common artificial sweetener goes by 3 different names) but it does get easier. In the 30 years my family and I have been dealing with my allergies a lot has changed. And it will continue to get easier as more people are aware of allergens.

  5. Hi Kim: We are visiting Madison next week to see my in-laws and I ran across your blog when I was googling “food allergies” and “Madison, WI”. Are there any recommendations for restaurants we can visit in the area that might be able to accommodate my oldest son’s allergies? He has significant allergies to milk, eggs, peanuts, tree nuts, sesame and shellfish. The grandparents want to go out to dinner with us and are asking for restaurant suggestions. Do you know of any that might be accommodating? We are not aware of the area and never visit restaurant generally due to his allergies. Let me know. Thanks,!!

  6. Reading this brought tears to my eyes; you expressed so well my experience. We deal with anaphylactic allergies to wheat and egg, along with daily intolerance. Shellfish and nuts we don’t know about because I can’t even face deliberately trying them… The fear of losing my son never leaves me and others really don’t understand how stressful that is to live with on a daily basis, not even my husband. Even when life is going along quietly, a reaction can come from nowhere and pull the rug out from underneath you again. Today it was a teacher who knew about my son’s wheat allergy, but thought it was OK to conduct a science experiment with flour in the classroom with all the children gathered around to watch…

  7. Kim, reading this brought tears to my eyes. I can relate to everything you are saying. Being a food allergy mom is tough. Having to manage multiple food allergies is so stressful and it does feel lonely at times. My little guy is 4 and is Anaphylactic to 8 different things and has over 30 food allergies that we know of. His safe food list is shorter than his food allergy list. Trying new foods is really scary since he’s reacted to 90% of the foods he’s tried. The mom guilt can be crippling at times. It’s been 2 years since he went into anaphylaxis from a soup I made him. Turns out he was allergic to everything in it. I had given him the foods separately and thought he did ok with them. Pureeing them together created the perfect storm for anaphylaxis . It happened so fast, I’m so grateful to have had an EPI pen and used it right away. Riding in the ambulance and being in the hospital was really intense and I am so grateful for everyone who helped stabilize him.
    Navigating new situations has been interesting and I’m still learning how to advocate for him. So far most people have been very kind when they find out about his situation. My neighborhood has hosted non food events, just so he could participate. I have been blown away by people’s kindness and concern. I know other people will never truly understand what it’s like. It’s just something you have to experience to fully understand. I want you to know you are not alone. Thank you for telling your story. Best wishes.

  8. Thank you for writing this blog. My two kids has similar allergies and I also feel so so very lonely at times. They were also diagnosed as infants four months old. DD was covered head to toe in eczema, cried all night long, and had bloody stools. The doctors dismissed it could be allergies and she was prescribed steroid creams. We finally got to see an allergist at 6 months and I was happy we knew what was wrong but at the same time devastated at the impact of what life will be.

  9. My son also has all the allergies. Egg milk wheat peanuts and treenuts (except almonds ) and banana
    Your blog I finished and cried !! I always feel so lonely. Not even near and dear one understand what am going through !!
    I would like to know if your son has outgrew any of his allergies ? Mine started tolerating cooked form of banana. Even that small change means a world to me..
    please let me get in touch with you thru FB

    • I can relate to this so much. My son is 10 mos and has had food allergies since about 3 weeks old. I’ve EBF, but he reacted from what I was eating. We’ve tried some solid foods, but I’m so concerned to try new foods because of the reactions he’s had so far. I’m worried he has some undiagnosed food or environmental allergens. He reacts by contact to foods he hasn’t ingested as well. It can be so scary. At 4 mos the blood test only showed one allergen, but at 9 mos he had 6. The doctor said it can change and he can outgrow them, but his reactions seem to be escalating.
      I’m sorry you all are going through this. It’s nice to know I’m not the only one. We should start an online group to connect.

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