My son was five months old when he was diagnosed with life-threatening food allergies. He’s now 11 and he and I have been learning how to manage his food allergies for his entire life.
I worry a lot about him as he gets older and I’m not always there to take care of him. Ultimately I have to trust that I have taught him well. Instead of teaching him fear and caution, I’ve focused on empowering him. Just like he cares for his health in so many other ways by exercising good personal hygiene, being careful when he crosses the road and wearing a helmet when he rides his bike, he is careful when he eats and carries his medication with him at all times.
Still, the fear is always with me. I’m a mum so that’s my job, I suppose, to be scared but hide it from my children.
I always thought he’d grow out of his allergies. I was told by many that he’d at the very least grow out of his egg allergy however it has gotten worse, not better.
“Any allergies he has now are for life,” we were told at his most recent doctor’s appointment. Any hope of an easier food future for him were gone, but we’re not alone in this. We have always been surrounded by incredible medical professionals helping us navigate it all and have made friends within the allergy community. I even have my brother’s best friend lending a hand. He has food allergies and he talks to my son about the strategies he uses each day to keep himself safe.
“You’ve got this,” I told my son. “You know what to do. I’ve kept you safe for this long and now I’m going to teach you to keep yourself safe.”
Still, it’s frustrating. Seemingly innocuous substances like eggs and nuts can threaten his life. Despite extensive research not much is known about the cause of food allergies and thus far, there is no cure, although there is some brilliant research taking place in Australia working towards a vaccine for some food allergies.