Anonymous wrote:OP where are these lobster enchiladas?
Anonymous wrote:I think it's funny that people who are happy to eat in a restaurant where you have no idea who has coughed or sneezed on your food can absolutely freak out if the tines of someone's fork has touched a teeny tiny spot of your food. What are you worried about catching via that bite of food that you aren't going to get in the restaurant bathroom?
I would try to relax a bit.

Anonymous wrote:Last week, I was out to dinner with a friend and was really enjoying a delicious lobster enchilada plate. My friend asked to try some, so I put a bit, using a clean knife, onto her plate. She said, "Wow, this is amazing" -- then dug back into my plate using her dirty fork, piercing the center of my entree!! Which made me grossed out so I didn't eat any more of it. It was expensive too. Somehow this has been eating at me, no pun intended, because I rarely eat out and it was a special meal that I then couldn't eat.
I didn't say anything at the time and she didn't notice that I stopped eating, just switched to chips.
I was almost thinking of sending her a text asking her to please Venmo me for the cost of the meal but that seems really aggressive, right?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OK, I actually texted her asking to chat about it. Stay tuned.
You're going to lose a friend and she's going to get a good cocktail party story. Especially if you ask for reimbursement.
I have never been to a cocktail party where anyone would be amused by a story of someone boorishly digging in to someone else food.
I personally would just not eat with that person again, so hats off to OP for attempting to bring it up and create a boundary.[/quote
If she brought it up at the time, that's fair. We all agree the initial behavior is rude. But if you are holding a summit to "establish your boundary" days later and are so germaphobic you couldn't cut around and continue your meal? Fine, but you're extremely, extremely neurotic. The reaction is is so hilariously over the top. Does she vomit on site at the prospect of tapas?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OK, I actually texted her asking to chat about it. Stay tuned.
You're going to lose a friend and she's going to get a good cocktail party story. Especially if you ask for reimbursement.
Anonymous wrote:You cannot ask her for cost of the meal. She was rude, you should have said something at the time but didn’t. Let it go.
As a side note assuming she doesn’t have some contagious disease I would have still eaten my meal.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OK, I actually texted her asking to chat about it. Stay tuned.
Freak.
Why is this freakish? Sometimes it's good to be refreshingly honest and transparent with people.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OK, I actually texted her asking to chat about it. Stay tuned.
Freak.
Why is this freakish? Sometimes it's good to be refreshingly honest and transparent with people.
At the time, sure. A week later? No, she will appear to be ridiculous, because she is. Not for not wanting to share, but for arranging a conversation to talk about it later. OP, use this as a learning opportunity for yourself to speak up when something you don’t like is happening, and otherwise move on.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OK, I actually texted her asking to chat about it. Stay tuned.
Freak.
Why is this freakish? Sometimes it's good to be refreshingly honest and transparent with people.