YOUR FRIEND WAS STEALING A PRESCRIPTION MED AND REPLACING IT WITH ANOTHER DRUG.
YOUR FRIEND WAS STEALING A PRESCRIPTION MED AND REPLACING IT WITH ANOTHER DRUG.
YOUR FRIEND WAS STEALING A PRESCRIPTION MED AND REPLACING IT WITH ANOTHER DRUG.
Am I ready to come up with a calm and reasoned response to this letter? ... no.
YOUR FRIEND WAS STEALING A PRESCRIPTION MED AND REPLACING IT WITH ANOTHER DRUG.
YOUR FRIEND WAS STEALING A PRESCRIPTION MED AND REPLACING IT WITH ANOTHER DRUG.
YOUR FRIEND WAS STEALING A PRESCRIPTION MED AND REPLACING IT WITH ANOTHER DRUG.
Now, I'm assuming this wasn't a medication that was essential to your or your partner's physical or mental health, because if it was then why are you even considering...no.
YOUR FRIEND WAS STEALING A PRESCRIPTION MED AND REPLACING IT WITH ANOTHER DRUG.
YOUR FRIEND WAS STEALING A PRESCRIPTION MED AND REPLACING IT WITH ANOTHER DRUG.
YOUR FRIEND WAS STEALING A PRESCRIPTION MED AND REPLACING IT WITH ANOTHER DRUG.
I'm sorry, I just can't get past this. That's up there with saying "oh, X says they're allergic to this food but it won't hurt them to eat my Yummy Family Recipe with this food."
YOUR FRIEND WAS STEALING A PRESCRIPTION MED AND REPLACING IT WITH ANOTHER DRUG.
YOUR FRIEND WAS STEALING A PRESCRIPTION MED AND REPLACING IT WITH ANOTHER DRUG.
Was it your med or your partner's? If it was your med, well, you're allowed to forgive your friend, though lock up your prescriptions if you do allow them in your house. But seriously?
YOUR FRIEND WAS STEALING A PRESCRIPTION MED AND REPLACING IT WITH ANOTHER DRUG.
Your friend stole your or your partner's medication and replaced it with something cheaper. This means you're spending that money on prescriptions without receiving the benefit. You might have thought "huh, this med isn't working, better try another" when it might have been just fine if you'd been taking what you thought you were taking rather than an OTC substitute. If the prescription med was essential for keeping you/partner alive, or if you/partner had had an allergy to the OTC med, your friend could have killed you/partner.
No, I don't think you should forgive your friend. I think that messing with other people's meds falls into the "someone else gets to forgive them, not me" category.
no subject
YOUR FRIEND WAS STEALING A PRESCRIPTION MED AND REPLACING IT WITH ANOTHER DRUG.
YOUR FRIEND WAS STEALING A PRESCRIPTION MED AND REPLACING IT WITH ANOTHER DRUG.
Am I ready to come up with a calm and reasoned response to this letter? ... no.
YOUR FRIEND WAS STEALING A PRESCRIPTION MED AND REPLACING IT WITH ANOTHER DRUG.
YOUR FRIEND WAS STEALING A PRESCRIPTION MED AND REPLACING IT WITH ANOTHER DRUG.
YOUR FRIEND WAS STEALING A PRESCRIPTION MED AND REPLACING IT WITH ANOTHER DRUG.
Now, I'm assuming this wasn't a medication that was essential to your or your partner's physical or mental health, because if it was then why are you even considering...no.
YOUR FRIEND WAS STEALING A PRESCRIPTION MED AND REPLACING IT WITH ANOTHER DRUG.
YOUR FRIEND WAS STEALING A PRESCRIPTION MED AND REPLACING IT WITH ANOTHER DRUG.
YOUR FRIEND WAS STEALING A PRESCRIPTION MED AND REPLACING IT WITH ANOTHER DRUG.
I'm sorry, I just can't get past this. That's up there with saying "oh, X says they're allergic to this food but it won't hurt them to eat my Yummy Family Recipe with this food."
YOUR FRIEND WAS STEALING A PRESCRIPTION MED AND REPLACING IT WITH ANOTHER DRUG.
YOUR FRIEND WAS STEALING A PRESCRIPTION MED AND REPLACING IT WITH ANOTHER DRUG.
Was it your med or your partner's? If it was your med, well, you're allowed to forgive your friend, though lock up your prescriptions if you do allow them in your house. But seriously?
YOUR FRIEND WAS STEALING A PRESCRIPTION MED AND REPLACING IT WITH ANOTHER DRUG.
Your friend stole your or your partner's medication and replaced it with something cheaper. This means you're spending that money on prescriptions without receiving the benefit. You might have thought "huh, this med isn't working, better try another" when it might have been just fine if you'd been taking what you thought you were taking rather than an OTC substitute. If the prescription med was essential for keeping you/partner alive, or if you/partner had had an allergy to the OTC med, your friend could have killed you/partner.
No, I don't think you should forgive your friend. I think that messing with other people's meds falls into the "someone else gets to forgive them, not me" category.