The “Flan Incident” + Your Best Tips on Bringing Your Latinidad To Work
Denise Soler Cox
Teaching Organizations How To Create A High Quality Culture? Where Everyone Feels Like They Belong - Award-Winning Filmmaker, Speaker & Author WHAT WILL THEY SAY (Simon & Schuster 2026).
For as long as I can remember, my mother’s flan has been a sacred dish in my family.
My own daughters prefer her flan over my own. #truestory
Even my husband, the #gringocowboy, brags how he could easily eat his own body weight in my mom's flan - it’s that good.
When I was in 4th grade my class had an assignment… bring your family’s favorite dish to share at a school-wide potluck dinner.
It was a no-brainer. I would bring my Mom's flan because I knew it was a winner.
But shockingly, the most requested dish at any and all family events, the single dish that puts a smile on everyone’s face when it’s walked through the threshold of every door and placed gently onto a cleared refrigerator rack so it maintains a perfect temperature, the dessert I've never had two pieces of because there was never anything left for seconds...
...was totally ignored.
It sat lifeless on a table next to homemade cookies, cakes, rice crispy treats with m&m's smooshed into the tops of every perfectly cut square and brownies galore.
Everything was being devoured except for her flan which began to lose its stiff shape after hitting room temperature and was practically melting into the caramel that she spent so much time perfecting to get it “just right.”
Earlier in the evening, I'd showcased it to my friends whose faces winced ans eyebrows contorted as they pointed to it asking “What’s that?” remarking that it looked “disgusting.”
That day I experienced one of my earliest “breaks in belonging.”
What is a break in belonging?
A break in belonging is when you think you belong to a certain group, but then there’s "an incident." ie what happened with the flan.
Something happens that makes you start to believe you are not really part of that group.
That night my Puerto Rican pride turned to embarrassment, then to confusion and then morphed once again to shame.
As a nine-year-old Latina, I suddenly had this realization that what we cherished and valued in my home, in my cultura was literally gross to them.
Remember that I was 9 but even at 19, 29 even 39 the feeling of what happened that night could bring me to tears. It still hurt well into my adult life and although in many ways it could be considered insignificant, the compound effect of similar things contributed to a very real feeling that I didn’t belong... anywhere.
What I’ve learned over the last several years is that millions of Latinos are dying a cultural “death of a thousand paper cuts.”
But there is good news! All is not lost.
There are simple steps you can take to reclaim your Latinidad.
If you like music ?? , try something with music or dance so you can begin building a fun connection back to your Latinidad.
Maybe you love tracing the history of family names...why not create a family tree using #ancestryresearch or connecting with a genealogist to start understanding your personal history.
The main thing is to choose something simple, that brings joy and grounds you in your culture.
You know what?
You could even make a flan!
What’s your favorite way of connecting back to your culture and what's your BEST advice on how you can do that at work?
Vice President, Marketing Strategy
3 年I connect to my culture at work by being active in the Hispanic Business Resource Group. It's the second biggest group at my company and many members are not Hispanic or Latinx at all. We have various ways of showcasing our culture, including live Microsoft Teams events where we share our family recipes and cook things live.
Ed Leader??Published author??Champion for equity??Community Advocate??Named 50 Most Influential Latinos?? Supporting literacy access for all??Bilingual. Biliterate.Bicultural
3 年I can relate. So can do many of our children. As I visit countless schools in person and virtually or even through pre-recoded messages of inspiration, I reiterate that our superpower comes from bringing along everything that makes us who we are. We don’t need to leave our Latinidad behind us we bring it along with us, and add it to our American (USA- I hate to say American because it makes the illusion that South America is not included) cultural gems. Personally I love flan more than anything I’ve ever eaten too. As a young person I too experienced those looks of confusion and yes disgust. As I’ve gotten older and wiser, as they say, I’ve learned to love that others don’t love flan. Literally MORE for me hahahaha!!! I know, I know - selfish. I never said I was perfect and I’ll add that to my list of “things to grow on”. ??????
EdTech | Customer Success | Content Development | Customer-Centric | Adult Learning Solutions | Project Management | Marketing & Communications | Bilingual, Biliterate, Bicultural | Author
3 年I claim my culture and find comfort in saying my name with as much Spanish flair as I can! #rollthatrchica ???? ????