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  • Jean Duane PhD
    Jean Duane PhD

    Cousin Sandra, Groupthink and the Truth

    Reviewed and edited by a celiac disease expert.

    This is an excerpt from Dr. Jean Duane's upcoming book, on the social aspects of celiac disease and food sensitivities. The book is derived from the study she conducted on celiac.com, and from her dissertation. It should be published sometime this year.

    Cousin Sandra, Groupthink and the Truth - A gluten-free diet can lead to isolation from friends and family. Image: CC BY 2.0--zenilorac
    Caption: A gluten-free diet can lead to isolation from friends and family. Image: CC BY 2.0--zenilorac

    Celiac.com 02/13/2020 - I made a rare visit to a cousin a year or so after I was diagnosed with celiac disease. As the youngest child in a large extended family, my cousin was closer to my mother's age than mine. He took my mother and me on a beautiful ride around Kansas City. I sat in the back seat as they reminisced about their younger lives while passing the places where they experienced them. It came time for lunch and he wanted to take us to a favorite BBQ place in the heart of Independence, MO. I hesitated at his suggestion, and he said, "You aren't one of those vegemanaterians, are you?" The coy word he used, and his tone suggested his disapproval of anything out of the ordinary. (In fact, at that time I was a gluten-free vegan!) I said, "I'll find something." During lunch, I picked at French fries, pretty sure they were cooked in a dedicated fryer. My mother and cousin exuberantly scarfed the BBQ. My cousin told us about another cousin I hadn't seen in over 40 years that I apparently look like and reminded him of. He said, "Cousin Sandra is weird. She used to bring her own food to our family dinners." 

    He was referring to a time, fifty years ago. Back then, members of the extended family met at my grandmother's house every Sunday to share their views on politics and happenings in the world. It was a close-knit family. Dinner consisted of the main dish (usually pressure cooked ham, green beans, onions, potatoes, bread, and cake for dessert) made by my grandmother, and side dishes brought by my aunts. I was no older than five, and have hazy recollections of these dinners, other than the warmth of family and the familiar smells of home cooking. To be included meant to eat, drink, smoke (it seemed they all did it back then) and converse around that big dining room table. I can imagine that someone daring to bring their own food, spreading it out on their placemat and eating it, while all those other dishes were being passed, might not go over well. 

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    As I reflect on my cousin Sandra, it occurs to me that she may have had celiac disease. That was in the early 1960's when it was virtually unheard of in the United States. Why else would she have had to bring her own food to those cherished dinners? A diagnosis prohibiting food of any kind would have been alien and unfathomable to anyone in my family. These are people who lived through the depression after all, where popcorn was the fare for breakfast, lunch, and dinner, if they even had that! Waving away any food, especially foods made by loving hands would have been viewed as an arrogant rejection of their abundance and love. 

    Perhaps she had a mental illness that made her "weird," or maybe she made unreasonable demands on the family, but I think the most likely reason is that she was just trying to protect her health. Considering how my cousin put it, she was weird only because she brought her own food to the family dinners. In his eyes, she became the "weird one," ousted by the family because of her audacity to bring her own food to the dinner party. Family lore according to my mother goes on to say that: "She ultimately divorced our family." Can you do that?

    It's a sad story, isn't it? But I think about it from time to time. I wondered if Sandra was so maligned because the family decided her special needs were so odd that they ostracized her, and she ultimately rejected them. Does that mean that anyone in the younger generation who may have inherited the same disease runs the risk of being shunned? I'd like to think we're more enlightened now, but thankfully, I'll never know. I do recall that my mother shushed family when they talked about their illnesses around me, fearing I'd imitate them, I suppose. Her attitude was that you made yourself well, or you made yourself sick, and I think she was careful to protect me from hearing about other people's illnesses so I didn't get the idea that I may have them too. She had a Pollyannaish perspective, and thought everyone in her family was perfect, no matter what. That made it very challenging for me to convince her that something wasn't perfect with me when I was finally diagnosed with celiac disease. In fact, I think she thought I brought it on myself. (I was in my mid-forties when properly diagnosed.) These were her "truths" and likely the "truths" of the collective family.

    Most of those people around that dinner table fifty years ago have passed on, I imagine happily gathered "around that table in the sky." In Sandra's case, family members didn't understand her dietary restrictions, agreeing she was "weird" and rejecting her for her special needs. She was stereotyped as a prima-donna. Cumulative family lore develops through repeated acts of storytelling formulating familial ideologies that perpetuate collective "truths." These stories form the group's opinion on given topics. Sometimes these "truths" evolve from just participating in the same activities together, and developing a way of doing things that everyone agrees on, as described with the Sunday dinners above. In their lively discussions, my extended family debated "truths" about politics, news stories, and current events. Similarly, they had a collective opinion about how each other should act while sitting around that table. When someone altered the established norms, like Cousin Sandra, she disturbed rituals, and rocked the family's agreed-upon "truths." Her rejection of the foods required the family to rewrite their collective story. This is rarely done on a conscious level, but rather it is done as groupthink. The unspoken "truth" was: you do what we do, eat what we eat, and even smoke what we smoke in order to fit in. Buck that system, and suffer the consequences

    In Cousin Sandra's case, the group determined her choices were a rejection of the others. She refuted the established but unspoken ideology (or taken for granted truths). As a result, she was rejected and mocked. From their view, if she didn't participate, she self-selected alienation. Before rejecting her, they likely cajoled her to participate, suggesting a little won't hurt you, or come on, just a bite. In fact, I can "see" my grandmother holding up a fork with a bite on it, saying, wouldn't you like just a taste? These urgings are attempts to include rather than exclude. What they really are saying is: you don't want to be rejected by the family by refusing our norms… come on, just have a little so you can stay a part of our group. That is actually a compassionate message. But we don't "hear" it that way when the food being offered to us is poison, and when we feel our needs are not being honored or understood. 

    "Man is by nature a political animal with an innate tendency to form into groups" (Aristotle). Cousin Sandra was a victim of groupthink. Groupthink is a process described originally by Janis (1972) where those empowered in a group share a common belief, whether it is true or not, and then put pressure on those who do not comply with those truths. Those not going along with the group's ways of thinking are censored, ignored, or ultimately culled unless they comply. Those who share the group's opinion are unified members of the group. Groupthink evolves through the process of familial storytelling where "truths" are formed and solidified, sometimes becoming self-censored, and self-serving (Janis, 1972). Ideologies are assimilated through conversation that conveys a story that intertwines cultural influences with long-held beliefs (Fisher, 1989). Narrators balance truth with motivations in a cohesive story with significant meaning (White, 1980) and seek reinforcement or agreement from outside culture, religion, and political influential forces (McAdams, Reynolds, Lewis, Patten, & Bowman, 2011). This story telling process to formulate "truths" is integral to family traditions, making meaning of shared life, "doing family" (Langellier, & Peterson, 2018, p. 1), and teaching family values (Koenig Kellas & Kranstuber Horstman, 2015). It is in our initial home where we learn fundamentals for what and how to eat, how to cook, how to participate in food-related rituals), as well as gender roles and power structure biases around food (de Certeau, et al., 1998; Pecchoni, Overton, & Thompson, 2008). Groupthink is a way of encouraging belonging to the group or family and creates power structures of "us" and "them." I don't think anyone in my family ever intended to bully Cousin Sandra out of the group, It just happened because of their rigid policies on how we ought to act perpetuating the ideology: Think like us, and belong. I doubt anyone ever talked openly about it because they lacked the tools and skill to broach a constructive conversation.

    Food is so integral to our social existence that forsaking the foods made by loving hands implies a repudiation of those hands, and the people who share it. Breaking bread around the dinner table is a way that people bond. Not taking that bread, or accepting that cup of tea, or eating what everyone else eats, is viewed as a silent form of rejection. This is why having gluten sensitivities causes so many social issues, and is one of the topics in my book. People I surveyed and interviewed told me many stories like the one above. As I reflected on what people said, I realized that the root of the problem is that we do not have language to talk about these things. If we could say, "I'm not rejecting any of you by not sharing your food. I have a disease that prevents me from eating it, and I still want to sit at this table and be a part of the conversation." We just don't seem to be able to have these candid conversations. But by identifying these flawed social norms, we can work to change them, so people rejecting food served around the extended family dinner table can be included, loved, and un-judged for their choices. The first step is to identify these long held "truths," put words to them, and discuss them openly, rather than living with unstated dysfunctional consensual rules that cause people who defy them to be alienated. 

    Let's discuss.

    1. What long held "truths" does your family live by?
    2. Please describe a time when you felt excluded because you didn't eat the foods everyone else was eating around the table. How did you handle it? How did the others at the table handle it?
    3. What would you tell Cousin Sandra if you could talk to her? 
    4. How does your family form "truths?" What happens when someone rocks the "truth" boat in your family? How do you collective reform your opinions/"truths?"

    References:

    • de Certeau, M., Giard, L., & Mayol, P. (1998). The practice of everyday life, Vol. 2. Minneapolis, MN: University of Minnesota Press.
    • Fisher, W. R. (1989). Human communication as narration: toward a philosophy of reason, value, and action. Columbia, SC: University of South Carolina Press.
    • Janis, I. L. (1972). Victims of groupthink. Boston: Houghton Mifflin.
    • Koenig Kellas, J., & Kranstuber Horstman, H. (2015). Communicated narrative sense making: understanding family narratives, storytelling, and the construction of meaning through a communicative lens. In L. M. Turner & R. West (Eds.), Sage Handbook of Family Communication (pp. 76–90). Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage Publications, Inc.
    • Langellier, K. M., & Peterson, E. E. (2018). Narrative performance theory: making stories, doing family. In D. O. Braithwaite, E. A. Suter, and K. Floyd (Eds.), Engaging Theories in Family Communication Multiple Perspectives (pp. 43-56). New York, NY: Routledge. 
    • McAdams, D., Reynolds, J., Lewis, M., Patten, A., & Bowman, P. (2001). When bad things turn good and good things turn bad: Sequences of redemption and contamination in life narrative and their relation to psychosocial adaptation in midlife adults and in students. PSPB, 27(3), 474-485. doi: 10.1177.0146167201274008
    • Pecchoni, L., Overton, B., & Thompson, T. (2008). Families communicating about health. In L. M. Turner & R. West (Eds.), Sage Handbook of Family Communication (pp. 306-319). Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage Publications, Inc.
    • White, H. (1980). The value of narrativity in the representation of reality. Critical Inquiry 7(1), 5-27. No doi. 


    User Feedback

    Recommended Comments

    Guest Dee

    Your article  certainly resonated with me.  I became anemic at age 4 ( 1959.) Coupled with my continuing GI issues, my physician father and his medical partners were pretty sure I had Celiac.  My mother thought her husband was gaslighting her.  Due to this and other issues my parents separated and later divorced.  My physician father left our small town leaving many impoverished patients behind who my father had once treated in return for " payments" depending on what the patient's family could afford.  Example:  a flatbed full of corn or potatoes from part time farmers. 

    My mother, but also much of my community, assigned a good deal of blame for my father's departure  on me.   I was told often that my anemia and frequent illnesses were due to my choice to be sick.  I learned at age 6 what the word " hypochondriac" meant and that I was one. 

    I found I have  Celiac by accident in 2004.  By then I had acquired one autoimmune disease and seemed on my way to a full blown lupus diagnosis.  After going gluten free the anemia disappeared, energy returned and my blood  rheumatoid factors fell from sky high to what one hematologist called "boring."AFTER I was diagnosed I was taken aside by relatives and  some of my father's fellow doctors and was  told the whole story about the suspicion that I had celiac.  

    Mother died in hospice after a 3 year stint in a nursing home.  During her life she suffered from: recurrent ulcers, recurrent UTIs, cystocele, endometriosis, hernias, pancreatitis, dementia, irritable bowl, Khrons -and I'm sure I'm forgetting other dx. 

    Yes, I too hope our culture has evolved from those old groupthink patterns regarding dietary sensitivities.  But given the words and attitudes of many restaurant workers when I give them my " I have Celiac, so..." speech. we still have farther to go. 

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    Guest Lyn

    An interesting twist to the above ideas comes with younger generations' attitudes. My teen daughter has celiac disease and, like cousin Sandra in the article, brings her own food to events. She finds that her friends feel bad for her, "understand" her celiac disease, and go out of their way to check with her that she has something good and gluten free to eat. She doesn't want this positive attention any more than Cousin Sandra received negative attention. She wants to simply attend an event, eat what she has brought for herself "under the radar", and fit it with the other kids.

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    Guest Michael

    Posted

    3 hours ago, Guest Lyn said:

    An interesting twist to the above ideas comes with younger generations' attitudes. My teen daughter has celiac disease and, like cousin Sandra in the article, brings her own food to events. She finds that her friends feel bad for her, "understand" her celiac disease, and go out of their way to check with her that she has something good and gluten free to eat.

    I wish (and hope) your daughter’s understanding friends’ attitude Is indicative of a more educated generation. I’m especially impressed with the fact that these are teens, where bullying seemed to be the norm.

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    sc'Que?

    Best non-science article I've ever seen on Celiac.com--hands-down!  Well written and easily translates to other situations where groupthink causes problems. (We seem to have an entire country battling over this notion right now.)  THANK YOU FOR WRITING THIS and THANK YOU to the editors for publishing!  

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    Guest Been there...

    Posted

    I was diagnosed Celiac in 2006. My mother-in-law told me in no uncertain terms that she would NOT be changing any of HER recipes for me. The next time I came to family dinner, I brought my own food. Several other relatives asked me why and I said I had food allergies and it was just easier. I don't know if someone said something to her or what happened, but the next time, I showed up with my own food and she proclaimed that I didn't need it because she had made me a gluten free meal! She was evasive when I tried to question how she had done this and what exact ingredients had been used, so I told her I was more comfortable just eating what I'd brought. She got super offended and my father-in-law yelled at me and said I could eat my food if I wanted but I couldn't use THEIR kitchen to prepare it. That led to a nearly 2 year estrangement - my husband buckled before I did, but he went to visit them by himself. 

    Nowadays, we get along more or less all right. She got over her ego and either lets me cook my own food, or calls me in advance to discuss the menu and has me bring a side dish or dessert to "share". We've had a couple tiffs over cross contamination (queue the eye-rolling, ugh) but it's at least workable. I'd be totally fine not going there at all, since food isn't the only issue I have with them, but my husband and kids want to go. We rarely stay for more than the day, though. 

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    Guest Adonnya

    Posted

    Interesting article.  I have had celiac since childhood and was diagnosed over 40 years ago. I don't attend family gatherings anymore. I got tired of all the stares and comments.  It's ironic my sister, niece, and nephew (from non celiac parents) now have celiac! I also have  een diagnosed with MCAS and alphatrytasemia.  It explains why a gluten free diet didn't always work.  I hope my grandchildren are  free from both. I live like a hermit now. 

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    Guest Barbie 1 Alicante

    Posted

    I have the same problem people don't understand cross contamination , they think I'm overreacting ,if only they knew what it was like to live with the coeliac disease ,I don't wish it on anyone .

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    Guest Tinac

    I do not have celiac disease, but I totally relate to this article. I have multiple sclerosis. I was diagnosed 32 years ago. I started bringing my own food because I became a vegetarian not wanting to add more inflammation to my body with all the issues ms brought to it. Literally,  of those things happened to me to as with Sandra with regard to all my family and friends as to how they treated me when I came to events where food was involved and I brought my own food or passed on theirs.  The comments were never encouraging, always hurtful. I actually divorced myself from my family and moved out of state as it just made things easier. I'm back after being gone more than two decades and nothing has changed. 

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  • About Me

    Jean Duane PhD

    Dr. Jean Duane is a social scientist and author of Gluten Centric Culture – The Commensality Conundrum, which summarizes a nation-wide study on understanding the social aspects of food/gluten sensitivities and celiac disease. Join Dr. Duane for workshops on the step-by-step transformation process of living gracefully with food allergies. Cookbooks include Bake Deliciously! Gluten and Dairy Free Cookbook and The Complete Idiot's Guide to Gluten Free Cooking Cookbook. Dr. Duane produced several spots for Comcast's Video on Demand, made television appearances on PBS and has been a featured speaker at two International Association for Culinary Professionals' Conferences and at the Gluten Intolerance Group of North America's International Conference. Dr. Jean Duane is a certified chef, has an MBA, and a PhD. A researcher, cooking instructor, speaker, and magazine writer, she won Kiplinger's "Dream in You" contest in 2006. To sign up for workshops, discover nearly 50 FREE recipes, or to reach Dr. Duane, please visit alternativecook.com.


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