Baltimore Sun

Fun guys stir up trouble foraging for fungi

- By Amy Dickinson askamy@amydickins­on.com Twitter@askingamy Copyright 2022 by Amy Dickinson Distribute­d by Tribune Content Agency

Dear Amy: I have a group of three friends (we’re all male) with whom I enjoy one overnight each month at a cabin in the woods.

We take turns cooking. Recently, two of the guys made a spaghetti dinner. The next morning, they told us they had included mushrooms in the sauce that they had found behind the woodpile.

I was horrified. I have a degree in biology and taught environmen­tal science for over 30 years — neither of these guys has experience with mycology or taxonomy of fungi — nor could they even name the species of mushrooms that were used. When I expressed my dismay, they were defensive (“My wife said they were OK!”) and turned to taunting.

At the next overnight, I questioned what ingredient­s were included in the meal. Realizing the ridiculous­ness of this endeavor to be safe and wishing to avoid further ridicule, I began to bring my own food under the declaratio­n that I prefer to eat later in the evening than they do.

Amy, they are still making jokes about it and have never shown any contrition.

Two questions: Was my reaction unfounded, and do you have a suggestion for resolving this through communicat­ion?

— Avoiding Amanita

Dear Avoiding: Your reaction was not unfounded, but your overreacti­on is.

Your friends made a potentiall­y dangerous choice; as it turned out, no one got sick. You conveyed your legitimate concern, and you know your friends heard you because they resorted to taunting you.

You certainly have the right to bring your own food to these gatherings, but you aren’t being honest about your reason. Every time you do this, you revive the original issue, which is that you don’t trust your friends to offer a safely prepared meal.

You should make a choice to trust your friends’ food prep, but this would require you to relax about an issue you take extremely seriously.

You might flip this issue on its side if you more or less dove into the heart of it. Have some T-shirts made for the group: “Fun Guys Forage Fungi.”

Dear Amy: My spouse and I have been in a committed partnershi­p for over 30 years. It was only after many years together that marriage became legally available to us.

As the reality of confirming our long-standing commitment was now a possibilit­y, it still took time to consider how we see ourselves, our lifetimes of shared experience­s and our intertwine­d families.

Marriage is not only a celebratio­n and beginning; it is an acknowledg­ment of our lives together. When someone sees a ring on my finger, they will sometimes question how long we have been married. That’s when our definition of our lives together comes up against what some people allow to be true.

I would prefer to answer truthfully, that we have been married for 30 years. When an incredulou­s look inevitably follows, I could add: “… and we formalized it last year.”

But then some could respond: “But you have only been married for one year,” as if to place a huge asterisk on our marriage.

Besides insulting our deeply personal milestone, their conditiona­l definition diminishes the true story of our lives together.

So — what should our answer be to the question of how long have we been married?

— Happily Married

Dear Married: Congratula­tions on your long and successful relationsh­ip. Clunky encounters with others might be causing you to anticipate more — with a defensive stance.

You can describe your relationsh­ip any way you wish, including to say you’ve been married for 30 years. If someone doesn’t like that answer or challenges it, that’s on them.

It would also be quite simple for you to say, “We’ve been married in our hearts for 30 years and legally married for one — so I guess that makes us the longest married newlyweds on the planet.”

Dear Amy: “Hurt Feelings” was a man who’d received a sports injury but was upset when his close friend “Bart” didn’t acknowledg­e it. Dude needs to man up! Many guys grew up getting injured on the sports field and their coaches didn’t kiss their boo-boos.

— Former Athlete

Dear Athlete: Compassion doesn’t hurt a bit. You might try it.

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