Gavin Irwin, representing Ojiri, said the art expert's "humiliation is complete" with the star losing "his good name" and the "work he loves."
Ms Patterson said she didn't tell doctors about the possibility that wild mushrooms had been unintentionally included because the lunch guests were already getting treatment for death cap mushroom poisoning."Even after you were discharged from hospital you did not tell a single person that there may have been foraged mushroom used in the meal," Dr Rogers said.
"Instead you got up, you drove your children to school... and drove home. And then you got rid of the dehydrator.""Correct," Ms Patterson said.The court heard there'd been conflict between Ms Patterson and her husband, and Dr Rogers suggested the accused was still angry at her in-laws for taking their son's side.
"You had two faces," Dr Rogers said, after making Ms Patterson read aloud messages in which she is critical of both Simon Patterson and his parents.There was the "public face" of appearing to have a good relationship with Don and Gail, Dr Rogers said, and a "private face" which she showed in her Facebook messages.
"How you truly felt about Don and Gail was how you expressed it [there]," she said.
"Incorrect," Ms Patterson replied, her head shaking and voice faltering.He came second in his age group at the Bristol Half Marathon, qualifying to run that race for England next year, too.
He said "running out there in the fresh air" is "a new kind of freedom"."There's a local farmer who often sees me go past all the time and we often have a chat. You get used to seeing the same people [on a run]," he added.
However, he said running so frequently has its downsides."If you're running up to 50 miles (80km) a week like me, you have to change your trainers every 10 weeks," he said.