raincitygirl: (Default)
raincitygirl ([personal profile] raincitygirl) wrote2014-06-20 09:27 pm

(no subject)

This isn't even my pairing (I'm a Steve/Bucky fangirl), but it made me laugh so hard. By [personal profile] astolat, have a Captain America: The Winter Soldier fanfic, Breaking News, in which Steve Rogers and Sam Wilson get married, and the paparazzi go insane. As does Tony.

I think I'm allergic to something in my apartment, and it damn well better not be the cat. Is it possible to spontaneously develop an allergy to cat dander at the age of 37 after no previous symptoms? For the last few months I've been sniffing whenever I'm home. It doesn't happen at work, or anywhere around the neighbourhood, or at other people's places. Just at home. I'm getting tired of blowing my nose all the time!
twistedchick: watercolor painting of coffee cup on wood table (Default)

[personal profile] twistedchick 2014-06-21 08:16 pm (UTC)(link)
It's also possible for them to go away again. My mother had a wide variety of allergies over her life, and some stayed a long time and some only a little while.

Look at what other things are outgassing or giving off pollen or spores or smells in the area. The thing is, when one thing starts to irritate you, others jump in that you don't expect. My allergies here in Maryland are much different than when I was in New York state -- different climate, different local pollutants, much more humidity.

ETA: When we had Simba the Magnificent, the 18-lb Maine Coon cat with the thick fur, I was allergic to him -- but it was *much* less when he did not eat fish. There is apparently some enzyme in cat saliva when they have to digest fish that is not there the rest of the time, and that enzyme is an allergen -- and since they lick themselves, it gets on all of them and into the dander. No fish? Much less problem.



Edited 2014-06-21 20:18 (UTC)