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The problem is when the food allergy/sensitivity is not so easy to pinpoint. I have come to believe that there are many, many more low-level food allergy/sensitivity issues that are un and under diagnosed.
I mean it's one thing if you eat something and your throat swells up or you break out in hives or you throw up *immediately*. Then, at least, people will believe you!
I never did like milk as a kid because it made me cough and 'produce phlegm.' I am I guess moderately lactose intolerant. Not wanting to drink milk as a kid in the 60's did not get you a whole lot of sympathy from ANY adults. They just think you are whining.
It's another if you just have a low level "I don't feel very good" reaction long after the fact. If it's something you eat every day you just think you're not very healthy or something. Or, if you are a kid, that you're faking.
It took FOREVER for my MIL to get diagnosed with a food allergy to wheat. She had symptoms for years. She feels a hundred times better now. But how would you ever know you were allergic to something you ate every day of your life?
My main problem as a kid was just that my mom is a terrible cook. Her "recipe" for vegetable beef soup is just to fry chunks of beef and dump in a can of mixed vegetables and cook it for hours with no added seasoning. (I HATE Veg-All
) In fact, she doesn't really season anything she cooks...my husband says he's never met anyone who could cook food with so little flavor.
I never had problems like that at grandma's house...mostly because grandma gardened and canned her own stuff. And she didn't fight with me over stuff I just didn't like (beets
)
But I think the Real, Overall problem we have as a society, is that, thanks to so few people growing their own food, and what passes for vegetables (fresh or canned) in the grocery store, we've raised at least 2 if not 3-4 generations of people who think vegetables don't taste good because The stuff you buy in the store is not grown for TASTE, but for Looks and Longevity!