Jump to content
  • Welcome to Celiac.com!

    You have found your celiac tribe! Join us and ask questions in our forum, share your story, and connect with others.




  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A1):



    Celiac.com Sponsor (A1-M):


  • Get Celiac.com Updates:
    Support Our Content
    eNewsletter
    Donate

No Support...


Pyro

Recommended Posts

Pyro Enthusiast

*sigh*

I just feel like getting this off of my chest.

College is done, so I'm back home for the break with the news that I'm now/have been celiac and that I need to avoid gluten. Instead of understanding, my mom just tells me that it's all in my head and that the reason I'm always in so much pain is because I eat "weird". I guess eating unprocessed meat, veggies, and nuts is weird somehow. Oh well. That wasn't my problem because she usually doesn't support me anyway, but the thing is she keeps leaving flour everywhere. Or using a glutened knife in the butter, or mayonnaise, or anything else that can be contaminated somehow.

Cookie crumbs on the counter, patches of pancake mix here and there, and just gluten everywhere I go. I even found out that the burgers she had ready to cook were randomly mixed with bread crumbs FOR NO REASON.

Of course I'm in pretty bad shape right now, thanks to being glutened out of my control.

From now on, I'll try really hard to clean the counters, avoid gluten-y areas, use my own pans, and so on but should I have to? I don't understand why she can't just be reasonable and simply putting away the things that are making me sick. Or maybe try to make some dinner that's not drenched in some form of gluten.

Ugh... My stomach hurts so bad right now I can't even think.


Celiac.com Sponsor (A8):
Celiac.com Sponsor (A8):



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



brendygirl Community Regular

That is so terrible, Pyro. You deserve to be taken seriously. I go to a support group in my area. Have you looked for one on the boards to see if there's one near you?

I think you are handling it very well, because I think I'd start throwing away all my mom's flour.

You're too old to spank, aren't you? jk

I use spray butter, so no knives go in there.

I also use the jelly that squirts out the top.

miles2go Contributor

My experience, it took about 2 years for my family to "get it" and they are generally really supportive. For instance, at Thanksgiving a couple of weeks ago, Mom declared that she was making the green-bean casserole anyway, Dad was doing the stuffing outside of the turkey when I asked about the stuffing, my excellent sister-in-law noted the lack of the usual rice dish and Mom asked about how she could make all of the Christmas cookies gluten-free, even though I said I didn't need more than one or two made that way.

*sigh*

They're just family... ;)

Margaret

ravenwoodglass Mentor

It can be hard when you have to stay with people that just don't get it yet. One thing that might help would be to get a big plastic bin and put nonperishable food items into it and store it in your room. You could even put a setting or two of dishes and in there that you would wash after use and then put back. That will also give you a safe place to store your toaster and a couple of small pots and pans. If your budget and space allows pick up one of those little refrigerators also and stick that in in your room. They will most likely 'get it' in time. Also the genetic nature of the disease and the fact that a parent has been feeding their child 'poison' for so long can lead to some unexpectedly strong feelings of guilt and denial. Hang in there it will get easier to deal with especially as you start to feel better.

miles2go Contributor

Although if you're going to do this, my mantra is to make as little a deal of it as possible. Like ravenwoodglass said, no parent wants to be reminded that they'd fed their child 'poison' all along.

I do fine when it's just with my parents, but when there's a lot of family involved, it just seems to go down the pooter quickly, even though some of the grandkids have issues, but some folks just aren't there yet.

"Advice is like snow; the softer it falls, the greater it dwells upon, and the deeper it sinks into, the mind." - Samuel Taylor Coleridge

pastorjaysonn Newbie

My mother was the same way. She just recently decided that Celiac Disease was a "REAL" Disease and not just something that I made up. I am 24 and married! She simply thought that I was just being "weird."

The other day, I made her and my grandmother a gluten-free dinner and she loved it! She said, "how can you eat this with the flour on it..." I told her THEN that I used a mixture of rice, potato starch and tapioca flours...she was floored! Sometimes, it just takes time...

My inlaws have been supportive from the start. They even made the entire family Christmas party last year a gluten-free dinner! Some get it some don't, but the fact of the matter is that if you don't get the support at home, get it somewhere because you will hurt yourself by eating gluten if you don't get the support and start believing that it is in your head, etc.. (from personal experience myself and from many other people I know with Celiac Disease going through the SAME thing) Hang in there!

Phyllis28 Apprentice

In ther future you might might want to look at the option of staying at school. I had a part time job in college which prevented me from going home over winter, spring and summer breaks. I was able to make arrangements to stay on campus. During the summer I had to pay rent. I had access to a kitchen so it did not matter that all of the food services were closed.

I hope everything works out.


Celiac.com Sponsor (A8):
Celiac.com Sponsor (A8):



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



tarnalberry Community Regular
...

Of course I'm in pretty bad shape right now, thanks to being glutened out of my control.

From now on, I'll try really hard to clean the counters, avoid gluten-y areas, use my own pans, and so on but should I have to? I don't understand why she can't just be reasonable and simply putting away the things that are making me sick....

While it may not seem like it, you mind comfort in figuring out where exactly you *do* have control, and this is one of those places. You have the choice of eating only food you cook in your own pans that you store in your own room prepared with utensils you also store in your own room. If you have nothing but two pans, two wooden spoons, a fork/knife/spoon set, a cutting board, a knife, and a plate, you can survive by making a wide variety of your own food, and you'll be fine.

As for "should you have to"? It's kind of a non-question. There are lots of should's and could's in the world, and quite frankly, they don't matter. You might feel entitled to something, and might have plenty of people agree with you - even most of the world (though plenty of non-gluten-free people might not think so, if they are ignorant of the issue) - but it doesn't matter if you can't get it from your mom. It's mostly a matter of figuring out how work around it. Hopefully *while* you work around it, you can talk to your mom and help her to come around, but you have to safeguard your health in the meantime, regardless of should's.

GlutenWrangler Contributor

You should randomly mix Ex-Lax in your mom's drink and then see how she feels. It makes me sick when people say it's all in your head.

loco-ladi Contributor

This reminds me of my mothers famous line " while in my house you sill follow my rules"

so she recently came to visit me for 10 days....... and it came back to haunt her :P

She ate gluten-free for 10 days got a clue about how it is to live in my world and took back alot of knowledge to my cousin who is a dx'ed celiac (not even close to being gluten-free either... eats hotdog buns cause they "calm her stomach" yeah right...)

I also had a conductor once who had a son who told her years ago he was going gluten-free on drs orders..... she thought it was "all in his head" until that fateful trip to guernsey on a train mith little ole me..... She called him and appologised to him...

eventually your parents will "get it" but it will take time, patience and a small twist of fate that turns them into believers, you just have to wait for it then gloat when they come to apologise to you....

in the meantime do what you can to keep yourself healthy and safe

Offthegrid Explorer

Might it be that she has symptoms, too, but is in denial?

It does take some time for people to "get it." Sometimes I think it's like when someone goes on a healthy diet, others criticize them because they know they should go on a diet, too?

For now, try to hang in there. You'll also probably want to cook all your own meals or volunteer to cook. You shouldn't have to do it, but it's your health at stake here.

Maybe you could also buy a book on celiac or gluten-free cooking for her to read?

Ken70 Apprentice

Don't feel bad my mother is a b#%ch too:) (seriously!)

At Thanksgiving EVERYTHING had gluten in it. On purpose I think. When I wouldn't eat anything she told me my gluten intolerance hadn't been "confirmed".

My father just got his test results back and he is in some real trouble. Her tune is a bit different now but I still suspect she would gluten me on purpose.

Good luck and you are not alone......

sneezydiva Apprentice

Did you get an actual doctor's diagnosis? If you were "lucky" enough to have a diagnosis, perhaps your doctor calling your mother and explaining the situation may be enough to change her tune. People take things better from "authority"

I'm so sorry. I know how it is dealing with skeptical relatives. I keep in mind what my first allergist told my DH and I when I was first diagnosed with evironmental allergies. He said no environmental control was too extreme, it is necesaary for my health. It is the same with gluten. And like eating gluten-free, non-sufferers find it extreme that I won't open my windows in the spring, or have 3 HEPA aircleaners in my house, but it is just what I have to do, so I do it. And eventually my family saw how much it helped, and they got a HEPA aircleaner for the guestroom, and dustmite covers for the guest bed. Hopefully with time, they will be the same way about my diet, and with time, hopefully yours will too.

Archived

This topic is now archived and is closed to further replies.

  • Get Celiac.com Updates:
    Support Celiac.com:
    Donate

  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A17):
    Celiac.com Sponsor (A17):





    Celiac.com Sponsors (A17-M):




  • Recent Activity

    1. - KathyR37 replied to KathyR37's topic in Coping with Celiac Disease
      2

      New here

    2. - Scott Adams replied to KathyR37's topic in Coping with Celiac Disease
      2

      New here

    3. - KathyR37 posted a topic in Coping with Celiac Disease
      2

      New here

    4. - Scott Adams replied to Colleen H's topic in Post Diagnosis, Recovery & Treatment of Celiac Disease
      3

      Celiac attack confusion and anxiety


  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A19):



  • Member Statistics

    • Total Members
      131,808
    • Most Online (within 30 mins)
      7,748

    mhendy123
    Newest Member
    mhendy123
    Joined

  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A20):


  • Forum Statistics

    • Total Topics
      121.4k
    • Total Posts
      1m

  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A22):





  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A21):



  • Upcoming Events

  • Posts

    • KathyR37
      Thank you for your response. I have already learned about the info you sent but i appreciate your effort. I am the only one in my family cursed by this disease. I have to cook for them too. I make sure that my utensils are free of gluten and clean after using them for other food. I use non-porous pots and pans and  gloves when cooking for them. One huge problem I have is a gag reflex out of this world and if something doesn't taste good it is not going down. Most commercially made breads and such taste like old cardboard.Pastas are about the same. I did find one flour that I like and use it regularly, but it is so expensive! All gluten free food is way more expensive. I only eat twice a day because I cannot afford to buy all that. We live on a very low income so my food purchases are quite limited.
    • Scott Adams
      What you've described—the severe weight loss, the cycle of medications making things worse, and the profound fear of eating before leaving the house—is a heavy burden to carry for 15 years. It is absolutely not your fault. While everyone's journey with celiac is different, the struggles with the learning curve, social isolation, and dietary grief are feelings many in the community know all too well. Your question about whether you should just eat what you want and manage the symptoms is a heartbreaking one, born from years of frustration. It's crucial to know that the diarrhea is a sign of ongoing damage to your small intestine from gluten, and simply managing the symptom with Imodium doesn't stop that internal harm or the risk of other complications. The fact that you are still getting sick within an hour of eating, even while trying to be gluten-free, is a huge red flag that something isn't right. This could be due to cross-contamination in your kitchen (e.g., using a shared toaster, colander, or condiment jars), hidden gluten in foods, or the possibility of another concurrent condition like refractory celiac disease. Don't give up!  This article has some detailed information on how to be 100% gluten-free, so it may be helpful (be sure to also read the comments section.):    
    • KathyR37
      I am new here but celiac disease is not new to me. I was diagnosed with it at age 60. At the time I weighed a whopping 89 pounds. I was so ignorant to celiac so I buried myself in learning all about it and looking for food I could eat. I lost so much weight and stayed sick all the time. So to combat the sickness I was give all sorts of meds for loose bowels and vomiting. All that just made me sicker. Eventually I chucked it all and went back to eating like I had all my life. Now I am from the south and biscuits and gravy are a big part of our food, as are breaded foods, pasta, and sandwich bread. Through the years I would try to do the gluten free thing again and am doing it now. It has not helped any. Within and hour of eating I have to run to the bathroom. I am now 75 and am wondering if I should just forget it and eat what I like, take Immodium and live the best I can. I cannot eat before going anywhere for fear of embarrassing myself. Family and church dinners are out of the question unless I eat and run straight home. I am so frustrated I just want to sit down and cry or throw something. Does everyone go through all this?
    • Scott Adams
      This article, and the comments below it, may be helpful:    
    • nanny marley
      Oh yes I can understand the tiredness after going threw all that, must be exhausting especially on the mind I have high aniexty so I can understand that , I wish there more easier ways for people to get help , I had a MRI on my spine some years ago without anything it was really quick and no prep , I understand the need for  them to see better with the bowel ,but you think they would use something a little less traumatic  for ibd sufferers on the bowels by now ,I hope your feeling better today 🙏
×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

NOTICE: This site places This site places cookies on your device (Cookie settings). on your device. Continued use is acceptance of our Terms of Use, and Privacy Policy.