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.”
MORE PLACES TO FIND LONG AWKWARD PAUSE:
Facebook: Long Awkward Pause
Twitter: @LongAwkPause
Tumblr: Long Awkward Pause Mag
LAP TV: YouTube
Would you like to see a topic discussed on LAP? Click HERE.
awesome story, it made me laugh and kinda reminded me of the feeling i had when i drunk my first cup of coffee. cheers from a fellow coffee addict
LikeLike
Thank you very much! Great to hear from another member of the club
LikeLike
This is such a great post! Trying coffee when your parents aren’t looking is such a classic way to get hooked 🙂
LikeLike
Thank you! And yes, you’ve gotta start them young and they’ll be hooked for life.
LikeLike
I’m not a hot coffee drinker, but I have gotten addicted to the McDonald’s chocolate chip Frappacino? Should I join your group? Is there hope for me? 😉
LikeLike
I can set you up with a sponsor if you’re interested!
LikeLike
LOL!
LikeLike
Reblogged this on jueanazri.
LikeLike
Reblogged this on Android Bethy.
LikeLike
Great read.
LikeLike
Thank you!
LikeLike
I’ve been there too. You’re not alone:)
LikeLike
Haha, good to hear!
LikeLike
I feel for ya! And they say it’s not a drug!!! Heck, it comes from remote mountainous regions of the world! What an awesome pressing… get it? French pressed, ah the darker the better…and who but you can recall the first bitter sips? That memory had been long gone for me until you dredged it up. How could I have ever thought it was bitter when it truly is like manna from heaven?
LikeLike
The darker the better indeed! Glad you liked it.
LikeLike
haha, I am convinced I’m a sugar addict, this was good.
LikeLike
Addictions are tough! Thank you for the kind words; glad you liked it.
LikeLike
OH EM GEEEEE .. I feel the same way about COKE .. FROM MC DONALDS!!!! My sweet addiction.
– One day it’s going to make me fat. Maybe I’m already fat.
LikeLike
Hahahaha, McDonald’s is legit; I fear I’m developing a McNugget addiction as well.
LikeLike
Reblogged this on Dinner Talk.
LikeLike
this is amazing. the memoir at the beginning is classic as well. love it!
LikeLike
Thank you very much! I’m glad you liked it.
LikeLike
the smell of coffee makes me nauseus, I really hope I don’t ever get addicted to it.
LikeLike
It’s a slippery slope, so be careful!
LikeLike
Reblogged this on Heidi On The Go and commented:
@anyakromhout, please don’t ever drink this much coffee. 😉
LikeLike
Have you tasted Ethiopian mocha or should I just shut up?
LikeLike
I’m afraid I haven’t had such an exotic treasure before. It’s at the top of my bucket list once I relapse though!
LikeLike
Brilliant!!! Shared on lifebetweenfiction
LikeLike
Thank you, thank you!
LikeLike
I definitely look for any excuse to grab a coffee during my day ! Sorry, I think the kettle just boiled !
LikeLike
Excuses are the best, they can rationalize anything.
LikeLike
I don’t know if its still early for me to be called an addict, but i love to look at the bright side. Very sensual beverage and puts you right in the mood. I guess our type is less claw snatching than American or whatever you’re from.
LikeLike
We are pretty aggressive about our hot beverages over here in the states.
LikeLike
hahaha! I FREAKIN’ LOVE THIS! great read! keep posting please.
LikeLike
Thank you, thank you very much!
LikeLike
You are so right! And they say, coffee is antioxidant! Sometimes I just need to slow down a bit. They tell me to get off the coffee addiction, or it’ll bring me back to ER.
LikeLike
Yeah, it’s rough! I get like caffeine headaches when it gets too bad–gotta be careful!
LikeLike
*gets up to fetch her cuppa*
LikeLike
Gotta have my fix
LikeLike
Simply brilliant! Brings back memories of my work placement year and final year of Uni. Many a road, bridge and report were built fuelled by the wondrous brown liquid! I have now cut back also, the sugar and caffeine shakes got bad!
LikeLike
It’s quite the blur/rush once you get real deep into the heavy browns.
LikeLike
The sign of a good blog post… you think of it weeks later while watching a silly cartoon YouTube video:
LikeLike
um how can you get addicted to coffee
LikeLike
Same way as anything, you develop dependence and become reliant on it.
LikeLike
Reblogged this on aimhighstayfly.
LikeLike
Reblogged this on drinkingforeleven and commented:
Sounds about right.
LikeLike
Praise God! I’m not alone! Kumbaya my Lord….
LikeLike
Coffee addict, present and accounted for 😉
LikeLike
Awesome, always great to meet another coffee addict!
LikeLike
Reblogged this on The Narrative Imperative: Tell Stories or Die and commented:
We get lots of groups here at the Epiphany Cafe. Here’s one I never thought I’d see: Coffee Addicts Anonymous. Here’s a post from one of its members:
LikeLike
Haha, Justin well done! I remember my first coffee. Instant. Mmmmmmmmmmmmmm..
LikeLike
Thank you, thank you, Becca! Who could forget, everybody remembers their first.
LikeLike
I’d should talk to you here. Which is not some thing I do!
I quite like reading a post which can make individuals believe.
Additionally, thanks enabling me to comment!
LikeLike
My coffee addiction grew so bad I would be awake for days and had to drink more when I got so tired I could hardly work. My church group had an intervention because my insomnia was so bad I had hallucinations and would blackout while driving. All the while that failed to see my large consumption of the dark brown heaven. I broke down one day as I could not keep my self awake while at a Wal Mart across from a Quicktrip that I had just bought an XL of heavenly joe. I passed out in the grass beind a clothes dumpster. I was sent to a Crisis Stabilization Ward because of my questionable health. They served it in there too. Still I am hooked on it and can’t break away. For a time I would sneek coffee when my family band me from the pot. I would take pictures of the position of the coffee pot, filters and can of heavenly grains. Then I would brew some and almost have an orgasumn while waiting to slurp it down with madd anticipation. I would chunk the used filter in the woods and put everything back according to the pictures I took then pour cup after cup down my gullet. Im still hooked to this very day and feel hopeless in ever breaking away.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Thank you for the mention on your blog! And yes, hopefully you won’t become too addicted and lose a Wall Street fortune like me.
LikeLike