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Coffee Addicts Anonymous

“My name is Justin.”

“Hello, Justin.”

“And I’m addicted to coffee.

“I’m not-uh, not totally sure how this works; this is my first night.  Do I just?  Okay, I’ll just start then.

“I had my first sip when I was thirteen.  You know how you do.  Just a half a cup, no more.  Home sick from school, parents leave for work and don’t empty out the pot.  Curious?  Sure. Mom and Dad raved about coffee enough; everything from “Don’t talk to me before my first cup, dear,” to “A morning without coffee is basically sleep,” or the famous “I swear if you drink that last fucking cup, honey, don’t bother coming home unless you want to sleep on the goddamn lawn tonight.” It was the morning ritual.  Everything revolved around talking about the coffee.

“It felt adult to be pouring a cup of coffee. I paused and then fished my dad’s old reading glasses from the junk drawer before popping them on.  This felt more mature, more grown-up.  I wanted to do this first time right.  With my cup poured I debated calling up a telemarketer to yell at, but I settled for Dad’s second-favorite pastime and just chuckled to myself as I read today’s Marmaduke while I slurped down my brew.

“The taste was horrible, like a gym locker mixed with Grandma’s house, and I nearly spit it on the floor.  I thought I was going to be even sicker.  Yet, the ensuing buzz was incredible, truly unforgettable. I was energized, alive, reborn after thirteen bland years spent shuffling through waking life.  It was everything my young mind had imagined being in love felt like.

“My mom and dad had lectured incessantly, urging me to avoid coffee.  Do as we say not as we do; they had no intention of watching their son grow up to suck down a hot load of brown each day.  It didn’t matter though.  The French press I saved up for unlocked a world of bedroom benders.  Soon it wasn’t uncommon for me to use eight-nine times before noon.

“No consequences existed for my addiction; I started doing amazing in school, my parents remained in the dark or had decided not to care, and I earned a full scholarship to Johns Hopkins.   College was a literal blur.  With my coffee and alcohol tolerances at all-time highs, a binge lifestyle took hold that left my brain and heart constantly having angry sex.  I was always awake but I never went to class — didn’t matter, my economics degree still landed me a Wall Street gig after.

“Life was beautiful, not like Jewish-father-heroically-saving-his-son beautiful, but more beautiful in an awesomely-kickass-how-I-imagine-a-stockbrokering-Colin-Farrel-would-live way. Trade all day.  Party all night.  Never sleep.  Never die.  No question, I was using round the clock. I’d carry a baggy of product with me and rub a dab of Peruvian brown in my gums for little pick me ups throughout the day.  That’s all I’d need if I didn’t have a chance to get a solid brew on.  We raked it in everyday and spent our nights waist deep in women and tongue deep in, well, women and cups of the most exotic, potent blends of coffee this world had to offer.

“I hadn’t slowed down at all by 2008.  Granted, there were two kids and a woman who I sent money to now, but it didn’t matter.  I ran that city — it didn’t sleep and neither did I.

“I’ll never forget it.  I was halfway through this cup of this intoxicating stuff called Tropic of Coffeecorn when I heard the news about Bernie Madoff.  I stopped.  My buzz of nearly twenty-five years crashed for the first time.  I had everything tied up in him and it was gone now.  I wanted to curl up on the floor in that underground non-fair-trade coffee parlor right then and die, but I was too wired.

“My kids’ mom offered to take me in, but instead I turned to the pot; family had always exhausted me where coffee had always energized me.  Coffee had got me there once and it could do it again.  I sold off my remaining assets and bought nothing but coffee, knowing I’d be back on top soon enough.

“I felt I was always just one cup away from finding that next tip, that next idea that could propel me back to my perch.  Seattle’s Best, Dunkin’ Donuts, 7-11 — you name it they kicked me out.  I tried bartering, begging, and hustling but nothing came of it.  Every day was a quest to get coffee and once I was banned from the shops I’d dig through their trash, sucking on old filters and licking the remnants from old cups.  I’d plug my whole gum line with old rounds while I furiously sucked, perpetually chasing that mocha dragon.

“Once the stores locked their dumpsters I took to licking the door handles of the workers’ cars.  Maybe it was my imagination, but I swear I could taste a hint of java on each stainless steel handle I’d slobber on.  The wheels finally fell off one winter day when I pinned a twenty-one-year-old Starbucks’ manager on the hood of his sedan and demanded he let me lick the coffee residue off his slender fingers.  He panicked, which made me panic.  I grabbed his hand and jammed that grubby index of his in my mouth.  He cried out in horror and a passerby phoned the police. They picked me up twenty minutes later a block away at a different Starbucks trying to barter one of my teeth.

“Thank you, everyone.  I’ll be seeing you soon; I’m here twice a week until my probation’s over now.”


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About justingawel (2 Articles)
www.justingawel.com

106 Comments on Coffee Addicts Anonymous

  1. cant get enough of the coffee bean 🙂

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  2. brilliant story, it remind me of my 1st espresso sip!

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  3. A hot drink made from the roasted and ground beans can do many things with humans …. 🙂
    nice writing ……

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  4. Ecstatic to know I am far from alone in not being myself until I get a gulp of the lifesaver called coffee. Lovely article!

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  5. coffee is no match for my smack and heroine and u know there is many more which i can mention cuz of privacy and personal reasons….so i’d appreciate if you will take it into consideration in ur next blog. see ya then

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  6. Reblogged this on ∞ Sweet Sincerity ღ and commented:
    “It was everything my young mind had imagined being in love felt like.”

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  7. My friend asked me, “Do I drink it at noon?” My reply, “Of course, I’m a coffee slut…I can do it all day long.”

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  8. I just got a fresh cup of south-Mexican blend when I stumbled upon your post. I feel I can still handle my coffee intake but you definitely made me think about consequences … smiles…

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  9. This post made me wanna go and make a cup of delicious coffee, but unfortunately it’s after 6 pm where I am :/

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  10. Caution! This post is best read with a cup of coffee in hand.

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  11. That’s the funniest thing I’ve read in ages! 😀

    As a hopeless caffeine junkie, I salute you.

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  12. “Absolutely brilliant writing!!” he proclaimed as he took a sip from his sixth cup of coffee that day.

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  13. It was a long day and I realized I had had more than 4 cups of coffee. That day I felt I had become a slave of coffee and decided to put a fullstop. The next day I put a strict number of hours to work and had only 2 cups of coffee. Instead had a quick dinner and then an 8 hour sleep. I continued this for the next week and was able to avoid coffee for an entire day. Your blog just reminded me of that day. thanks for sharing the experience.

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  14. Reblogged this on The F. Critique and commented:
    This is quite funny, and oddly sounds somewhat familiar to me when I ran out of coffee beans a few weeks ago. Hmm, perhaps a warning of the dangers of caffeine addiction, or an insight into the sprawling and magical world of coffee? Well done.

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  15. Great post – If any of you are ever anywhere near Lancaster, England, get yourself to Atkinsons & Co. They have a hundred varieties of coffee beans in great brown sacks – Brazilian, Columbian, Somalian, Ethiopean, you name it – they roast the beans before your eyes then take you next door and make coffee. And they go for the whole ritual – filter, drip filter, syphon, espresso, whatever you like – you will leave that place WIRED! I live half a mile away and i can smell the beans roasting on the wind….heaven.

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    • That sounds amazing and I would love to go back to England if given the chance. I love the idea of just a place where you can customize just about everything you want right before you eyes like that.

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  16. Reblogged this on Life Trotter Corner and commented:
    Great now I want coffee despite the possible consequences T_T

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  17. treatwilliams // September 9, 2013 at 3:52 pm //

    I like coffee

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  18. Reblogged this on Being Weirdly Awesome and commented:
    C-O-F-F-E-E = 😀

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  19. That was wonderful!!

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  20. Greatly written! Enjoyed reading every bit, and even though it is said that all experiences differ from each other, I could relate to that quite a lot! Don’t consider myself an addict, but the “first taste” experience reminded me of my first “real” espresso.
    Well done!

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  21. Lord, I am such an addictive personality. I never got past my first taste of coffee…dreadful! But I’ve been addicted to lots of other things (from tea to cocaine), so when I read your post it actually made me think, “huh, that sounds fun…maybe I should try coffee again.” Geesh. Think I’ll go pour myself a glass of wine.
    Congrats on your freshly pressed! Enjoy the celebrity, a nice high in itself!

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  22. You made me laugh :). Thanks for the good read.

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  23. Is this a sign? Should I not start drinking coffee again? *Grabs herbal tea.*
    –JW

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  24. Love this. Brilliant stuff. I’m a new coffee drinker myself. Avoided it for 32 years. Now, I’m hooked. Not sucking-on-strangers’-coffee-stained-fingers hooked, but I need one in the morning!

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  25. Oh my word that’s brilliant really got me thinking… Ties in with the subject of my latest blog, cup of coffee? Beatzindesign.wordpress.com … Though mines is a bit more about an atmosphere then the brew itself

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  26. I’m also coffee addicted , when I start to make my handmade soaps I made the coffee soap first =]

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  27. thequalitylife // September 10, 2013 at 10:46 am //

    Reblogged this on The Quality Life.

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  28. I allow myself one vice and that is a cup of coffee in the morning. It is from the days I went to college. The excuse was to stay awake but in truth I loved the ritual and the taste. I guess I am a creature of habit.

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  29. Danielle Averso // September 10, 2013 at 12:06 pm //

    Is this a true story? It’s so brilliant! It really can show the effects of coffee when one becomes addicted. I’ve always thought coffee was a safe “drug” to use. I myself have come dependent on it and often find myself at a Starbucks or Dunkin Donuts just because I’m bored or have a random craving in the middle of the day. I can definitely agree to the part where you talk about using coffee to get through college. Even in High School; It became like a daily routine. I would find myself at Dunkin Donuts every morning and sometimes wonder how I got there. Love this!

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    • Thank you, I’m glad you liked it. Those cravings are sneaky; one minutes you’re driving down the street and the next second you’ve crashed your car into the side of the coffee shop aching to get your fix.

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  30. Haha this is hilarious! Insightful also I can feel myself on the brink of coffee addiction- I may turn to tea, or freshly squeezed orange juice for my morning fix from now on!

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  31. It was 1989 and I was pregnant with my my son when I had my first sip of coffee. It was at work in a little paper cup. Five of those little paper cups later I called my ex-husband to wax poetic about coffee. He had been an addict for years and my fresh perspective energized him. Needless to say, my son was literally a bouncing baby boy when he popped out.

    Thanks for the trip down memory lane and the wonder years of “…chasing that mocha dragon.”

    Like

  32. Crispus Bett // September 10, 2013 at 4:02 pm //

    Am from Kenya, and thank God your not in Kenya. We make one of the best coffee out there…you’d die…The story made me laugh, reminded me of my eclares sweets addiciton when I was young. Memories.

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  33. Caffeine,one the two greatest drugs that are legal. The other one is SUGAR.

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  34. Very well written. Congrats

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  35. Hi, my name is Linda….

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  36. You never cease to bring me joy

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  37. The best part of waking up, is Folger’s….er, Starbucks … in your cup!!

    To life and living it with a caffeine buzz.

    Christy

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  38. This story gave me a good laugh. I recently gave up coffee and feel as though I should check-in to rehab.

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  39. hayleylarue // September 11, 2013 at 3:08 am //

    I’m in the same boat. Can’t go a day without it 😦

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  40. It is always a relief to know people with coffee addiction. Loved the story, I can just imagine how coffee means to you! Bravo!

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  41. I loved this, it made me realize I should probably go to rehab before my addiction gets out of control…

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  42. Reblogged this on caringforfamily and commented:
    A love inspects the distorted promise

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  43. Hilarious! 🙂

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  44. Jackson Davies at Blogprefect // September 11, 2013 at 4:04 pm //

    I miss Caffeine! 😦 Damn my Migraines!!!!

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  45. haha wonderful! laughter is currently filling my living room!

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  46. Took me ages to scroll down here to comment. Doesn’t need anything else saying for this great article. I need a coffee now….

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  47. Nice writing. Coffee is a fascinating topic – especially how some of the most devoted users end u[ with reduced effects from it just because of the regularity of their use. And definitely an acquired taste, in a good way…

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  48. Awesome! Delighted that you liked it.

    Like

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