The Importance Of Being Harpo
Thursday, June 07, 2007
  Tea hints
Some people here are about to suffer a shock from my outrageous, bohemian, aberrant lifestyle but I don't drink coffee.

Yes, I know. Sorry for springing it on you like that; just take a deep breath and try to recover. But it's true: I no longer drink coffee.

I have no wish to present you with a long spiel about the health dangers of habitual coffee intake — I don't know whether there are any and don't particularly care. My choice is not one of health nor one of morality, vegan-style, rather one of deliberate self-abnegation.

Being a software developer I was living the cliché: drinking my long blacks happily and with merry freedom. Nothing better than sitting in a café reading a recent Wired, perhaps, with a slice of cake and a tauntingly bitter espresso with strong body and impressive crema. Mmmm.

Our development team were working on a particular project a couple of years ago and the company rented a room for us several suburbs away from the rest of the office which was delicious and very productive — just the three of us in this one tiny room with three laptops, a test server, a big sheet of butchers paper on the wall with lists of tasks and the woman running a freight company on the phone in the room next door (“Or moy gord. Did he really? Or moy gord” every minute and a half. Christ, she drove us nuts). But there was nothing to do when we wanted a break except to make ourselves more coffee and or moy gord were we floating on the ceiling by mid-afternoon every day. I would go home and suffer dizzy spells and strange heart palpitations. I would wake up in the morning awash in sweat and with shaking hands: it was actually kind of groovy.

And in the midst of this my girlfriend, a lass I was particularly fond of, dropped my sorry ass leaving me a crushed, self-hating, shell of a lad. I lived the cliché again: standing at cliff-edges staring mournfully out to sea with biting offshore winds pulling at my hair as the orchestral soundtrack swelled and the camera swooped in a helicopter around me etc.

I guess that in order to regain the sense that I had some sort of control over myself I decided to give something up of my own choice. There was, of course, no way I was giving up the smack so given our recent experiments in coffee insanity I just stopped drinking it — cold turkey — and have been enjoying my Earl Greys ever since.

Now, as much as I enjoy rambling endlessly and in dull detail about my own history there was a point to this: there are a couple of hints in making a decent cup of tea which I would like to share:

So. Yes, indeed: tea hints. Don't say I never do anything for you.
 
Comments:
I like the way you aspire to the full heights of all the world of software development has to offer

AND

an outrageous, bohemian, abberant lifestyle.

Now that's a life journey, if ever I saw one.

PS Software developers use butcher's paper? Who knew?
 
My wife will benefit from everything I am learning here.

That sentence is not usually applied to tea.
 
GW — It's true about that life journey. I am such a complex fellow.

It's also true about the butcher's paper (that thing I just said about complexity? Yeah, not so much…)

INC — Haha! Nor is it usually applied to my page. I hope she enjoys her tea: I can recommend English Breakfast with some Oklahoma.
 
Putting milk in the cup before taking the tea bag out = ecchhh. Whether it's before the water or after the water (and you make a good point about fat preventing absorption) it looks revolting.
 
In an attempt to see what I was like without addictions I once gave up coffee, booze, reading and music for one whole week (this was before I started on the smack). I had a shocking headache for the first five days and was paralyzed with depression for the weekend. On monday I was happily self-medicating again and I've never looked back.

Dan
 
Fluffy — It is hard to be aesthetically pleasing whatever you do when teabags are involved: you can't imagine Princess Diana, for eaxample, would have wound down after a hard day's anti-landmine campaigning by dunking a teabag and then putting it aside to dribble all over a saucer. Paul Burrell would surely have had other ideas simply on aesthetic grounds.

I hope you appreciated that post, though.

Dan — Good on you. I wouldn't have thought that books were such a dangerous toxin. You're suggesting I would be happier back on the coffee?
 
Happier back on the coffee? Eh, I don't know. Everyone gets their own thing out of self deprivation.

I just like to deprive myself of self-deprivation.
 
I, too, have forsaken coffee for the glories of tea. When I'm feeling particularly wan, a good hit of Irish Breakfast does the trick beautifully.
 
Hey hey, Meva! Splendid to hear it.

I didn't list it in my post but what do you find the difference a nice teapot makes to the enjoyment you take from your Irish breakfast?
 
Some pleasures are immeasurable, Harpo. Give me a pretty teapot to brew, and a delicate fine bone china teacup to sip and I am transported. (Of course, I usually drink it from a plain old mug, but sometimes I just need to make the effort.)
 
Post a Comment



<< Home

My Photo
Name:
Location: Melbourne, Victoria, Australia

Is rumoured to have hobbies.


Contact
Send stuff to my email address

Archives
June 2006 / July 2006 / August 2006 / September 2006 / October 2006 / November 2006 / December 2006 / January 2007 / February 2007 / March 2007 / April 2007 / May 2007 / June 2007 / July 2007 / August 2007 / September 2007 / October 2007 / July 2008 / July 2010 /