By Tom
"Venti" Waters
May
1 , 2004
Do they have twelve step programs for coffee fiends? And if so, what do they serve at the meetings? Beer? |
Based on a new medical finding that's getting a lot of mileage, friends
tell me that an apple will wake you up more than a cup of coffee. Perhaps if
it's thrown at my head at maximum velocity it will, but in the mean time, I'll
stick to coffee. I'm a coffee junkie. I think I have a problem. Do they
have twelve step programs for coffee fiends? And if so, what do they serve at
the meetings? Beer? Who knows. I just started drinking java two years ago at
my last job. I worked in an office early in the morning and it was only a
matter of time before I ran out of pop money and switched to the moca side.
At first it was a cup or two in the mornings during work. When I left
for my current job, I only drank coffee on my days off, but then it was entire
pots. I'd sit at home and suck back six to eight cups and bounce off the walls
sweating coffee. Then I'd come down, crash, and go into a post-caffienated
coma. In the last six months, I've been living with a student who had a
completely different schedule, and I've leaned on coffee to help combine our
routines. After staying out with the boys until 2 a.m., Maxwell house helped me
crawl out of bed and see my girlfriend off to school.
Then I got into Starbucks whenever I had to work early in the morning.
Or when I was a little drowsy. Or when I was entertaining the notion that I
was semi-diabetic to a degree that couldn't be measured by science and needed
trace amounts of sugar. It was a good excuse to take a walk and get some
exercise. It made me feel cool to walk around with a tall grande cup of joe
sloshing around with some pep in my step. I could stop whenever I wanted. I
was
just drinking some coffee to take the edge off. Another recent study shows that
Starbucks has five times the amount of caffeine that other coffee chains in
the country. This explains a lot. Now I'm hooked. I drink at least one large
tanker of Starbucks a day and as much as seventeen pots of coffee on days off.
Sometimes I sweat coffee because I drink so much. My hands are constantly
clammy from an accelerated heart rate due to the constant influx of caffeine in
my system. Houston, we have a problem.
I've gotta cut back before there's an intervention. Coffee makes me
irritable, and I'm irritable to begin with. I keep a small carafe of latte in
my
jacket pocket in case of emergencies. What happens when you cut back from
coffee, the opposite of the shakes? I've taken to chewing on grounds and coffee
beans when I'm not around faucets or large bodies of water. I guess I have an
addictive personality. Once, when I couldn't find transportation to a coffee shop,
I ate two gallons of coffee ice cream and an entire coffee cake.
Coffee has become an integral part of Western society, so it's tough to
spot those of us with a problem. Almost everyone with a morning job drinks
coffee at (or on the way to) work. I drank pop for twenty six years before I
ramped up to coffee. My health teacher in high school always said that
Dr.Pepper
was a gateway beverage. In retrospect, I should have taken her more
seriously. Medical fads and studies aside, you can't lose with Epicureanism.
Nobody's ever dropped dead from taking things in moderation. I'm going cold
turkey
on my coffee. Right after this cup. And after that I'm going to kick my
fondness for heroin, painkillers, sock puppets, throw pillows, and chocolate
malteds. For those of you without a sense of humor fond of writing complaint
letters, I'm joking.