My girlfriend made fried eggs for me one Sunday morning, the kind of quiet, lazy breakfast that’s supposed to feel like home. I watched her crack the eggs straight into the pan—no rinsing, no hesitation.
I frowned.
“My mom always rinsed eggs first,” I said without thinking. “You’re supposed to wash them.”
She froze, spatula midair. “What?”
“I mean,” I added quickly, “she always did. Isn’t that… necessary?”
The air changed. Not explosive—just heavy. She finished cooking in silence, set the plate down, and went to sit on the couch. The eggs tasted fine, but the silence didn’t.
Later that day, she finally said, “It wasn’t about the eggs.”
I looked up. “Then what was it?”
She sighed. “It’s the way you said it. Like there was a right way—and I was doing it wrong. Like your mom’s way was the standard.”
I felt defensive at first. I hadn’t meant it that way. I was just stating a fact, wasn’t I?
But that night, lying awake, I realized something uncomfortable: I did compare. Not just eggs—laundry folding, grocery shopping, even how she cleaned the kitchen. My mother had been my unspoken measuring stick, and my girlfriend kept coming up short in ways she never signed up for.
The next day, I did something I should’ve done sooner.
I looked it up.
Turns out, in many places, eggs aren’t supposed to be rinsed at home at all—it can actually increase the risk of bacteria. My mom rinsed eggs because her mom did, not because it was necessary.
I felt stupid. And worse—ungrateful.
That evening, I cooked dinner. Nothing fancy, just pasta and sauce. When my girlfriend walked in, I said, “I owe you an apology.”
She raised an eyebrow but sat down.
“I wasn’t upset about the eggs,” I admitted. “I was stuck in the idea that ‘the way I grew up’ equals ‘the right way.’ That’s not fair to you.”
She studied my face, then smiled a little. “Thank you for saying that.”
I slid my phone across the table, showing her the article. “Also… you were right. About the eggs.”
She laughed, the tension finally breaking. “Good. Because I wasn’t about to start rinsing them.”
From then on, we made a rule: no invisible rulebooks from childhood. We talk. We ask. We learn each other’s ways instead of ranking them.
Now when we cook together, we joke about it.
“Rinse or rebel?” she’ll tease.
And I’ve learned something far more important than how to handle eggs:
Love isn’t about doing things the way someone else taught you.
It’s about choosing each other’s way—together.