Almost Dying in Dublin

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traveling with a peanut allergy

“I’ll have the banana breakfast smoothie and toast,” I smiled at the young guy behind the counter at a hole in the wall cafe in Dublin. Little did I know how much I would come to regret those words.

I had been in Europe for 10 months, studying abroad in Salamanca, Spain and I was on my way home to America for the summer. I caught a flight deal with a layover in Ireland, so my best friend N, her brother and her cousin and I decided to check out Dublin for a week.

Settling down in a booth in the back, N and I started gabbing about what we were going to do for the day in Dublin. Like many under-twenty-one year old Americans abroad, it didn’t take long for us to decide on the Guinness and Jameson factories as our hot spots for the day.

traveling with a peanut allergy

As the waiter brought our food over, I slipped my Ireland guidebook back in my messenger bag and prepared to tuck in. I was hungry! I took a bite of my toast and then grabbed my smoothie. I took a couple big chugs of my drink, swallowing everything before a look of complete horror passed over my face.

“F***! This smoothie has peanut butter in it!”

This may not sound like a big deal to most people, but I am violently allergic to peanuts. And not get a rash, swell up and take a Benadryl kind of allergic, I’m talking head to foot hives, my throat closes up and I go into anaphylactic shock and could DIE kind of allergic.

Ever since I found out I had a peanut allergy in kindergarten when my class made peanut butter and oat dog biscuits for Clifford the Big Red Dog and I ended up in the ER, peanuts have been the bane of my existence.

I am not exactly innocent when it comes to my allergy. In fact, I am rather lazy about have a life-threatening illness. I am very adventurous when it comes to trying new food, and (until Dublin) I almost never ask if it a dish contains peanuts.

traveling with a peanut allergy

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In the States I usually don’t have to worry because every restaurant and food provider is so afraid of getting smacked with a lawsuit, they label everything. In Spain I didn’t really have to worry either because peanuts (cacahuetes) are a very uncommon ingredient. I know what foods are known to have peanuts, like Asian noodles, Thai restaurants, Reese’s pieces and unlabeled cookies. I carry Benadryl and an Epi-pen with me wherever I go. Unfortunately my live-saving Epi-pen expired when I was in Spain and I never bothered to get a new one since I was coming home.

For those of you who haven’t seen Pulp Fiction, an Epi-pen is a shot of epinephrine (adrenaline) that people like me carry around with them in case a peanut sneaks up on them unaware, like in a smoothie. SERIOUSLY, WHO PUTS PEANUT BUTTER IN A BANANA SMOOTHIE? You have to pull the cap off and stick it in your leg for 10 seconds to prevent death. It’s like magic.

traveling with a peanut allergy

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Now normally I have the nose of a bloodhound when it comes to peanuts. I can smell them from fifty yards away, even cooked in food, so I almost always catch the little buggers before consumption. If the stray peanut does get by my nose, I can usually taste it and spit it out immediately before swallowing, leaving me with hives and welts in my mouth, which SUCKS but it could be worse. What is truly dangerous is when a peanut goes down my throat.

Now I drank AND swallowed a good quarter of that smoothie before realizing it had peanut butter in it. And I didn’t have an Epi-pen. As my southern relatives are fond of saying, I was up the proverbial shit creek without a paddle.

Tears welled in my eyes and I started cursing, shaking my hands around yelling “what do I do? what do I do?!” (poor N, V, and C, I owe them a dinner just thinking about this story and what they had to put up with)! Grabbing a napkin, I tried to scrub out any peanut smoothie residue from my mouth before grabbing a glass of water and running to the bathroom.

traveling with a peanut allergy

If you don’t have a food allergy, it is really hard to describe the feeling you experience after eating something like a peanut. Your mouth and throat burns and itches, it gets tight and you can’t breath, it literally feels like someone is shoving a spiky pillow down your throat to suffocate you. It is the most horrible, scariest feeling I have ever experienced.

It doesn’t help that I am completely irrational and my first reaction is that I am going to die, usually leading to me having a panic attack in addition to an allergy attack. Wonderful.

Now, I don’t want to gross out my more delicate readers, but basically I drank as much water as I could and stuck my fingers down my throat. Better out than in. Unfortunately it didn’t really help. I think consuming peanut butter (which is very concentrated) and as a liquid it went to work much faster on my body than I anticipated. N was trying to get me to go to the hospital, but I stubbornly insisted I would be fine. The tail end of a trip from a year in Europe? I was church mouse poor. I couldn’t afford an ER visit with no health insurance. I made N scamper off to a pharmacy for meds while I tried to get it together in a dingy little diner bathroom.

At this point, I could barely breathe. The room was spinning and my whole body hurt. The last coherent thought that passed through my mind was that I didn’t want to die on the floor of a diner bathroom. Then I passed out cold. In retrospect, it’s the only time in my life I have passed out in a bathroom stone-cold sober, rather ironic, no?

Not one of my finer moments.

I would faint two more times that day and it took nearly 24 hours for my body to recover. I couldn’t keep down any medicine, food or water for a day, and I can’t remember ever being in so much pain in my life; it retrospect it was incredibly stupid for me not to go to the hospital. I was lucky I didn’t die.

traveling with a peanut allergy

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But you know what I felt the worst about? I felt both guilty and humiliated.

There is nothing worse than having no control over your body. I should have asked if that smoothie had nuts in it (in my defense, it did have the ingredients listed, just not peanut butter) but I should have known better. Being in Europe people don’t have the same issues with food allergies and labeling like we do in the US. It was humiliating for my friends to see me so sick and so unable to take care of myself. I hate getting ill in public. And I felt guilty that my food allergy ruined our day in Dublin and that N and her family had to nurse me back to health. No Jameson factory for us, though maybe if we had gone, a shot of whiskey might have cleared all the peanut proteins from my system. They would have had to carry me though, I could barely walk.

This was something I never wanted to experience again.

What to take away from this?

For me, travel and food are invariably linked. I will never sacrifice traveling because of a peanut allergy. One of the best ways to get to know a country and it’s culture is through its food. I believe the two can coexist in relative peace, if you are careful and plan accordingly. I even believe that one day I can travel safely around such peanut-infested places like Thailand (oh snap! Did I just give away one of my upcoming trips?!)

Talking with Jodie from Legal Nomads at TBEX in Girona about her experiences traveling gluten-free inadvertently encouraged and inspired me to evaluate my own trips and I how I prepare and deal with roaming the world with a potential life-threatening illness.

Apart from simply being more careful in the future, I’ll always make damn sure I’m covered for health and travel insurance. I recently discovered World Nomads Travel Insurance which, when compared with other insurance companies I’ve used before, seems unbeatable. They have customizable and affordable policies that fit with any travel style. Each policy is flexible, can be changed at any time and covers ALL the adventure sports!

This post is the first in a series I am developing about how to travel with a food allergy. From my own traumatizing experience in Dublin, I am going to show you how to travel the world safely with a food allergy, like peanuts.

Get excited allergy people!

I learned a valuable lesson that day on the bathroom floor in Dublin: how to be a cautious and aware food traveler. Not to mention, I now have an irrational fear of banana smoothies, which sucks because I love bananas and I love smoothies, just not together. Shudder.

I’m excited to revisit Dublin for TBEX Europe 2013 and see what food curveballs this city has in store for me!

Do you have a food allergy? How do you cope with it while traveling? Have you ever had a scary food incident abroad?

traveling with a peanut allergy

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94 Comments on “Almost Dying in Dublin

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  1. Hi Liz, great post!

    I’m also allergic to nuts, peanuts and more food. I’m planning to travel to Thailand and I definitely want to avoid your experience. If that story had happened to me I would have died…

    I just wanted to ask you if you had any problems carrying Epi-pen in your bag. It seems that injections are not allowed in the hand bag and if I keep them in the checked bag they might freeze up on the plane.

    Thanks in advance.

    1. Ive had tree nut allergies all my life and never really thought about them until they became more mainstream and seem to be in everything now a days.

      Last year I was on 33 flights and have travelled many places like Thailand, Bali, Ecuador, Galapagos, Dominican, Eastern Europe etc etc and have never really had an issue with nuts until I was in Bali. We were fortunate to have a private chef in Thailand, but even with the chef I still made my own food and went to the markets.

      Ive always been able to carry my epi-pens on the plane with me via carryon and haven’t even had the slightest resistance from any officials going through security or anything like that 🙂

      When I was in Bali I had the worst attack to date and actually had to go to emergency via ambulance. I managed to just get my epi pen out and injected before I passed out so it literally saved me. The couple times before that when I had attacks I would always just drink Benadryl and I would just drive to the emergency to get checked out so this one was a shocker.

      Now, I pretty much don’t eat what I don’t make which works out well as Im huge into fitness, but makes it a bit tricky when travelling. I’ve also made a habit of phoning food companies to see their manufacturing and handling procedures on supplements and some other foods that are essential in my meal plan and its actually quite interesting depending on which food company it is. At the end of the day more knowledge is better and even though its a pain in the butt to pack food or do your own meal prep, its so worth it 🙂

    1. Thanks for sharing your story. It makes nut allergies real to some who doubt the consequences those with nut allergies have. I have lived for 60 years with a nut and seed allergy, and have been respected by most people when I requested information at a resturant, but beware of oils, and the things your foods are cooked in. Canola Oil is often used, as well as cotton seed oil. The servers will tell you it is Vegetable oil. Ask, ask ask until they read the small print on the bottle and inform you as to the exact type of vegetable oil.

      I have sat in Airplanes that served peanuts or cashus and had to breath in the fumes for an hour or so in close quarters. Very bad, made me sick for at least 24 hours.

      On a special birthday, my husband took me to a very fine restaurant in Detroit. I informed the servers of my allergy. Dinner was fine, but,for desert I ordered Key Lime pie. Who makes Key lime pie with nuts? Wrong!!!!! The crust was crushed walnuts!!!! 50mg of benidril, then a frantic car ride to the hospital,while throwing up, My throat was swelling shut. I had an anaphalatic reaction. I was so anxious, I forgot to use the epi- pen I had in my purse. There was an accident on the freeway so my husband had to drive on the curb for a few miles to pass the tie up. I came to in the emergency room. Nice evening out!

  2. Hey Liz,

    I’ve been deathly allergic to a lot of different things my entire life so reading this hit me pretty hard. The top of the list for me includes all nuts, any kind of seafood, most berries and dogs, all of which will send me into anaphylactic shock. I’m also asthmatic which doesn’t help. Since I’ve been coping with this for 20+ years now I can honestly say that I’m pretty lazy when it comes to my allergies as well. I don’t always carry my epipen when I don’t have pockets, I don’t always keep it on my person when I have it, I often let them expire without even noticing and I also don’t typically ask about ingredients in every meal I eat. I know how awful all of that is but after dealing with it for so long it sometimes just ends up in the back of my mind.
    I also get really embarrassed about these types of things. I never want people to have to make special accommodations for me, I don’t want to be the one to make everyone leave when there’s a dog around and I hate drawing attention to my allergies, even if it could potentially save my life.
    One of my biggest goals in life has always been to travel full-time around the world. As soon as I finish school and save up enough, of course. So as you can probably assume, having so many life-threatening allergies has been a huge concern for me. Sorry for writing this enormous comment but I just wanted to say that I’m really glad to know that I’m not the only one with these sorts of problems, even though it does feel that way sometimes. Anyway, reading this has inspired me to be a little more careful and also helped to give me the confidence I need to stop letting life-threatening allergies get in the way of my life goals, especially traveling.

    Thanks!
    -Nikki

  3. That is crazy. As a non allergic person it is hard to imagine how bad it can be but you describe it well enough to be really glad I dont have it.

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