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

Etiquette Advice Please


nthei

Recommended Posts

nthei Apprentice

It's Assistance Day and I'm an assistant!

I work for a lawfirm who were wonderful enough to take us assistants out and also send us wonderful looking cookie baskets. Yep a COOKIE basket. It did have a box of chocolates enclosed, however, the ingrediants listed FLOUR, so no go on ANY of it for me. Since I'm Celiac, and yes the firm does know this, I decided to share my basket with the rest of the assistants and put my basket in the kitchen for all to partake. I don't have any one to give them to at home, so I thought that was the best idea.

However, when I was taking my boss to get his car, it hit me all the sudden that that act of putting the basket in the kitchen was rude. I swear I thanked him for it verbally. And I am truly thankful and grateful they thought of me, unfortunately I can't have that stuff and I don't have any one to give it to and didn't want to waste it.

Was that rude?

Should I maybe give a little thank you note or something to smooth out the edges?

A friend in Celiac

Chris


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



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



tarnalberry Community Regular

I think it's one of those things that could be seen as rude by someone who's sensitive about these things. Given the circumstances, however, I think it was probably the least rude thing to actually do with it, other than sharing it with neighbors, which is the same spirit but changes who knows about it. ;-)

But what's done is done, and if you're concerned he might think it rude, since you said your office knows about you being celiac, you might just pop into his office and say "I just realized someone may have found it a little odd that I didn't partake in my basket, but shared it. I just wanted YOU to know that I do REALLY appreciate the gesture, and though the ingredients meant I could enjoy by eating, I appreciated getting to share those goodies with everyone else." (Well, I'm not too sure on the last part, really, depends on your boss... Something that mentions, I didn't not eat them 'cause I'm a snob, but that you also got happiness out of sharing it, since the idea of a gift is to bring happiness.) Then you'd have your bases covered.

But in my book, no, I don't think that was rude. But I'm not big on "Proper Etiquette". :-D

aljf Apprentice

I don't think that was rude at all, and you needn't worry about it. A lot of people don't eat sweets anyway and would have done the same thing. If you thanked the boss, that was fine. Besides, from what you said, it sounds like ALL the assistants got the same basket, so it's not like your boss went to a lot of trouble to select a gift just for *you* (in which case it would be very odd for him to have bought a celiac cookies anyway!)

skbird Contributor

I haven't eaten sweets the whole time I've been at my current job (3 years) and everyone knows this - unless I make them myself. But they keep giving me candies for Christmas, candybars in my mailbox (everyone gets them sometimes, I'm not singled out), etc, and I always just give them to someone else in the office. I don't think anyone thinks its rude, usually the giver feels bad about remembering too late but then they forget the next time, until it's too late.

I would have been really touched by a basket of cookies but probably done the very same thing you did. It sounds like you were tactful enough (I know people who would say, "I can't eat that, what did you give it to me for???"

Stephanie

mela14 Enthusiast

I think you were gracious enough! Don't sweat the small stuff...i'm sure it was a lovely gift but imagine how your boss would have felt if you ate them, got sick and then couldn't go to work! I'm sure he would be upset that he didn't put more thought into the gift he gave you.

I think you were very polite!

KaitiUSA Enthusiast

I don't think it was rude at all.

You may want to give a thank you card...thats what I do for everyone who gets me anything.

Don't feel bad...I think that was a good way to handle it

nthei Apprentice

Thank you everyone for the awesome replies. Believe me, it helps.

After more thought, I'm hopeful it didn't come across as rude. All of us will set cookies and what-not in the kitchen for everyone to enjoy. I. E. our copy vendor brings us cookies when they do large copy jobs for us as a "thank you" and I set those in the kitchen, etc. I guess it was because it was a gift that, for some reason, made me think that way.

My boss is a pretty good boss and he knows what I have went through with this condition and, again, after some thought, I'm sure he didn't want to leave me out of the basket giving and knew I would share and be glad that he thought of me. At least that is what I'm telling myself.

I hope you are all doing great. I've been gluten free one year, there's been a couple downs, but I must say, it wasn't as hard as I thought it would be. However, I did go through this period where I ate TONS of gluten-free cereal because someone said you "can't have cake anymore" and I wanted cake so bad(never had a craving like that before), and I mean the kind of cake you just walk into a bakery and get, allready made! I've got myself over that now and getting back on track. Not eating every gluten free thing out there. Those glutano big breaks are awesome and hard to resist though.

YOU ARE ALL AWESOME.

Keepin' it gluten free and rocking!

Your friend in Celiac

Chris


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



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



Canadian Karen Community Regular

I don't see a problem at all with what you did. I think it was a nice gesture, actually....

You did mention that they knew you were Celiac, therefore, even if the though ever did enter into their mind "Why didn't she eat them?", they should immediately remember, "Oh yeah, I forgot, she has Celiac Disease and CAN'T eat them"..... They are lawyers, aren't they? They should be pretty sharp!

I wouldn't worry about it in the least......

A thank you card is always a nice gesture regardless of any gift you get, any occasion....

Karen

plantime Contributor

I would have kept the basket itself, but put the cookies on a plate for everyone to share. I do not think you were rude. Rude would have been if you had started crying and whining and throwing a fit because someone forgot that you couldn't have the cookies.

Archived

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


  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A19):



  • Member Statistics

    • Total Members
      131,608
    • Most Online (within 30 mins)
      7,748

    lorrasmama
    Newest Member
    lorrasmama
    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

    • Scott Adams
      It seems like you have two choices--do a proper gluten challenge and get re-tested, or just go gluten-free because you already know that it is gluten that is causing your symptoms. In order to screen someone for celiac disease they need to be eating gluten daily, a lot of it--they usually recommend at least 2 slices of wheat bread daily for 6-8 weeks before a blood screening, and at least 2 weeks before an endoscopy (a colonoscopy is no used to diagnose celiac disease). Normally the blood panel is your first step, and if you have ANY positive results there for celiac disease the next step would be to take biopsies of your villi via an endoscopy given by a gastroenterologist.  More info on the blood tests and the gluten challenge beforehand is below: The article includes the "Mayo Clinic Protocol," which is the best overall protocol for results to be ~98% accurate. Here is more info about how to do a gluten challenge for a celiac disease blood panel, or for an endoscopy: and this recent study recommends 4-6 slices of wheat bread per day:   Not to discourage you from a formal diagnosis, but once you are diagnosed it may lead to higher life and medical insurance rates (things will be changing quickly in the USA with the ACA starting in 2026), as well as the need to disclose it on job applications. While I do think it's best to know for sure--especially because all of your first degree relatives should also get screened for it--I also want to disclose some negative possibilities around a formal diagnosis that you may want to also consider.  
    • Wheatwacked
      Yes.  Now, if you hit your finger with a hammer once, wouldn't you do your best not to do it again?  You have identified a direct connection between gluten and pain.  Gluten is your hammer.  Now you have to decide if you need a medical diagnosis.  Some countries have aid benefits tgat you can get if you have the diagnosis, but you must continue eating a gluten-normal diet while pursuing the diagnosis. Otherwise the only reason to continue eating gluten is social. There are over 200 symptoms that could be a result of celiac disease.. Celiac Disease and Non Celiac Gluten Sensitivity  both cause multiple vitamin and mineral deficiency.  Dealing with that should help your recovery, even while eating gluten.  Phosphatidyl Choline supplements can help your gut if digesting fats is a problem,  Consider that any medications you take could be causing some of the symptoms, aside from gluten.        
    • trents
      Welcome to the forum, @Ben98! If you have been consciously or unconsciously avoiding gluten because of the discomfort it produces then it is likely that your blood antibody testing for celiac disease has been rendered invalid. Valid testing requires regular consumption of generous amounts of gluten. The other strong possibility is that you have NCGS (Non Celiac Gluten Sensitivity) which shares many of the same symptoms with celiac disease but does not have the autoimmune component and thus does not damage the small bowel lining. It is 10x mor common than celiac disease. There is currently no test for NCGS. Celiac disease must first be ruled out. Some experts in the field believe it can be a precursor to the development of celiac disease. Having one or both of the primary genes for developing celiac disease does not imply that you will develop active celiac disease. It simply establishes the potential for it. About 40% of the population has the genetic potential but only about 1% develop active celiac disease. 
    • Ben98
      TTG blood test and total IGA tested on many occasions which have always remained normal, upper GI pain under my ribs since 2022. I had an endoscopy in 2023 which showed moderate gastritis. no biopsy’s were taken unfortunately. genetic test was positive for HLADQ2. extreme bloating after eating gluten, it’ll feel like I’ve got bricks in my stomach so uncomfortably full. the pain is like a dull ache under the upper left almost like a stitch feeling after a long walk. I am just wanting some advice has anyone here experienced gastritis with a gluten issue before? thank you  
    • Wheatwacked
      "Conclusions: The urinary iodine level was significantly lower in women with postmenopausal osteoporosis, and iodine replacement may be important in preventing osteoporosis"  Body iodine status in women with postmenopausal osteoporosis Low iodine can cause thyroid problems, but Iodine deficiency will not show up in thyroid tests.  Iodine is important for healing, its job is to kill off defective and aging cells (Apoptosis). Skin, brain fog, nails, muscle tone all inproved when I started taking 600 mcg (RDA 150 - 1000 mcg) of Liquid Iodine drops. Some with dermatitis herpetiformis, Iodine exacerbates the rash.  I started at 1 drop (50 mcg) and worked up to 12 drops, but I don't have dermatitis herpetiformis.
×
×
  • 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.