In a quiet dinner with coworkers, a self-proclaimed “office Foodie” relentlessly commandeered every conversation, twisting lively moments into culinary interrogations. His eloquent critiques and endless questions stifled the group’s genuine connection, turning what should have been shared stories into a one-man food symposium.
When the spotlight inevitably shifted to him, the narrator seized the moment to reclaim the dialogue with a playful rebellion. By professing an unexpected love for plain raw celery, they subtly defied his dominance, injecting humor and humanity back into the evening’s fractured camaraderie.

AITA for declaring to a foodie that my favorite food is raw celery, causing him make a scene?

















As renowned social psychologist Dr. Susan Krauss Whitbourne explains, ‘Often, when we feel unheard or annoyed by someone else’s behavior, our immediate reaction is to want to control or stop that behavior, sometimes through indirect or passive-aggressive means.’
The situation highlights a classic conflict between maintaining group harmony and addressing disruptive behavior. The co-worker, identifying as the ‘Foodie,’ engaged in conversational one-upmanship, demanding narrative performance from others regarding their ‘experiences.’ This pattern suggests a need for external validation, positioning himself as the authority. The OP’s response was a direct counter-attack using absurdity, effectively demonstrating the superficiality of the co-worker’s line of questioning. While the OP successfully halted the behavior, the escalation—particularly the physical reaction (slamming the fist) from the co-worker and the OP’s decision to commit to the lie afterwards—moved the interaction from a minor social correction to a significant interpersonal incident.
From a professional perspective, the OP’s initial tactic was an understandable, albeit risky, form of boundary enforcement against conversational domination. However, doubling down on the lie once the co-worker was clearly upset and left was inappropriate, as it added unnecessary emotional labor and potential long-term awkwardness for the entire team. A more constructive approach would have involved a direct, calm statement like, ‘That’s interesting, but we were enjoying our conversation about Dune; perhaps we can stick to that,’ followed by a brief, sincere apology to the group for derailing the evening after the co-worker left, without needing to sustain the celery narrative.
AFTER THIS STORY DROPPED, REDDIT WENT INTO MELTDOWN MODE – CHECK OUT WHAT PEOPLE SAID.


















The original poster (OP) engaged in a prank by deliberately asserting an unlikely preference (plain raw celery as a favorite food) to disrupt a co-worker’s self-proclaimed expertise and controlling conversational style. This action successfully silenced the intrusive co-worker but resulted in significant group awkwardness and created an ongoing social complication for the OP, who is now expected to maintain the unusual pretense.
Given the mixed reactions—the OP’s intent to stop the interruption versus the resulting negative impact on group harmony and the creation of an awkward ongoing lie—the central question remains: Was the OP justified in using elaborate deception to curb the co-worker’s annoying behavior, or did their reaction escalate the situation beyond a simple social correction?







