Mrs. Olsen: Unngrrgh...
Caulfield: I can't wait until I'm old enough to blame MY morning issues on a lack of coffee!
Mrs. Olsen: I wish I were still young, when coffee seems to make a dent.
58 years and counting for me. And no caffeine via any delivery system for the last 34. And yet I’m usually the first one up and functional in the morning. Go figure…
imgran, and like any drug, its effects vary from person to person. I drink more than a liter of coffee a day. I can sleep any time with no problem from caffeine. No withdrawal symptoms if I stop. Its main effect (other than peeing plenty) is increased ability to concentrate on stuff like math problems. If only coffee had more theobromine… But it sure doesn’t help my typing. So if there are more typos I didn’t find, remember my positive opinion of the stuff might be due to a touch of ADD.
I drink 1L of Oolong tea per day, which has about half the caffeine of regular coffee. Tea has antioxidants and catechins which have several health benefits and drinking it regularly enough can decrease risk of cardiovascular disease, cancer, stroke, and osteoporosis. I get energized and hydrated from my tea.
I don’t drink coffee, tried it once and couldn’t stand the taste. I find drinking plenty of water helps keep me going in much the same way others claim coffee does for them, to each his own I guess. I do like to have the occasional iced tea but that is the extent of my caffeine intake.
Oh, that lovely black magic… I’ve broken my soda addiction, but I do still enjoy a bold cup’o’joe some mornings… so much so, I wrote an ode to caffeine (read or don’t read, I don’t mind either way): http://www.holdingontothemagic.com/2009/01/black-magic-more.html
My first coffee was from my Swedish grandmother – half coffee, half condensed milk with sugar in a baby bottle at 6 months of age. Still like my coffee & cream w/o the sugar – well, I like that too, but gave it up. Gramma fed me pancakes, too, all nearly 70 yars ago. I seem to be fine -
Ah, Sharuniboy, please don’t allow a single member’s overzealous reaction taint an entire religion for you. True, “Mormons” are taught to avoid coffee, but it was very much overstepping bounds to “outlaw” it for everyone else. It was a personal quirk, based on a religious mandate, not the religious mandate itself. I don’t care if you have to practically have a coffee IV. I don’t drink it (can’t even stand the smell), but each should set their own standards when it comes to coffee ingestion.
fruegade over 12 years ago
I still is where I live.
Varnes over 12 years ago
Uhg, black coffee………Kids drink a lot of “energy” drinks that never used to be around before…gets ’em wired fine….
SusanSunshine Premium Member over 12 years ago
I’m a complete failure at giving up coffee.
puddleglum1066 over 12 years ago
58 years and counting for me. And no caffeine via any delivery system for the last 34. And yet I’m usually the first one up and functional in the morning. Go figure…
imgran over 12 years ago
Caffeine is a drug, and like any other drug, your body can develop both a dependency and a tolerance.
Also, like any drug, it’s best when used sparingly and with discretion
wwh85cp over 12 years ago
Let he/she who lives without dependencies of any type cast the first stone at my coffee addiction.
Caffeine is a dependency-inducing drug, but a minor one.
I’ll keep my caffeine and defend it against the next person’s tobacco or alcohol dependency any day.
Even if they are all legal, the harm created is not equal.
Larry Miller Premium Member over 12 years ago
imgran, and like any drug, its effects vary from person to person. I drink more than a liter of coffee a day. I can sleep any time with no problem from caffeine. No withdrawal symptoms if I stop. Its main effect (other than peeing plenty) is increased ability to concentrate on stuff like math problems. If only coffee had more theobromine… But it sure doesn’t help my typing. So if there are more typos I didn’t find, remember my positive opinion of the stuff might be due to a touch of ADD.
Zaristerex over 12 years ago
I drink 1L of Oolong tea per day, which has about half the caffeine of regular coffee. Tea has antioxidants and catechins which have several health benefits and drinking it regularly enough can decrease risk of cardiovascular disease, cancer, stroke, and osteoporosis. I get energized and hydrated from my tea.
littleannoyingdog over 12 years ago
Gotta have my Dunkin’s
Sportymonk over 12 years ago
Eight O Clock Dark Italian Roast Whole Bean coffee freshly ground. Yum. Also Coffee with Chicory in it. Otherwise, keep it black and straight.
2252895 over 12 years ago
You got that right!
phantomEngineer over 12 years ago
I don’t drink coffee, tried it once and couldn’t stand the taste. I find drinking plenty of water helps keep me going in much the same way others claim coffee does for them, to each his own I guess. I do like to have the occasional iced tea but that is the extent of my caffeine intake.
Niki1983 over 12 years ago
Oh, that lovely black magic… I’ve broken my soda addiction, but I do still enjoy a bold cup’o’joe some mornings… so much so, I wrote an ode to caffeine (read or don’t read, I don’t mind either way): http://www.holdingontothemagic.com/2009/01/black-magic-more.html
Chewiek9 over 12 years ago
If it’s made correctly it should be just nasty and bitter!
Garrycarol over 12 years ago
My first coffee was from my Swedish grandmother – half coffee, half condensed milk with sugar in a baby bottle at 6 months of age. Still like my coffee & cream w/o the sugar – well, I like that too, but gave it up. Gramma fed me pancakes, too, all nearly 70 yars ago. I seem to be fine -
lynnskay over 12 years ago
Love your philosophy. I totally agree with it.
cutiepie29 over 12 years ago
Ah, Sharuniboy, please don’t allow a single member’s overzealous reaction taint an entire religion for you. True, “Mormons” are taught to avoid coffee, but it was very much overstepping bounds to “outlaw” it for everyone else. It was a personal quirk, based on a religious mandate, not the religious mandate itself. I don’t care if you have to practically have a coffee IV. I don’t drink it (can’t even stand the smell), but each should set their own standards when it comes to coffee ingestion.