To distract from the consistent incorrect use of tense in my last post, which I’m hoping you won’t realize took me a full day to get around to fixing, I’m going to talk about coffee and its accessories.
I didn’t drink coffee until I turned 30. With company over one night and me, pregnant with my third and last child, I percolated a pot for our guests just as I’d done a million times before. But this time, as I set out the cream and sugar, the spoons and the mugs, I added one for myself without thinking. I poured the dark and steamy liquid, filling each one, including my own. My friends and my husband looked on, somewhat shocked.
And then, as natural as can be, I drank it.
I imagined it was a one-off, but from then on, my baby begged for beans. By the time she was out of the womb and a walking, talking two year old she was pleading for teaspoons full of my sweet and milky caffeine. (You may want to fault me for this, but I’m British and was raised on tea—let’s face it, we have since discovered that that is just as caffeine-infused as coffee and I turned out fine. No really, I did.)
It’s been a long few years since that first cup and it took me some time to figure out what it is about Starbucks that makes it the apparent all that.
It’s the lid.
I can’t even drink the regular coffee at Starbucks. It’s too stark, too bitter for me, so I tend to go for a milky Cappuccino, but sometimes, you just want a cuppa, you know? And I do love a good Double Double.
But. That. Lid.
I am aware this is the quintessence of first world problems but this is the world in which we live. With the knowledge available and the ‘perfect’ sample ripe for the copying, why oh why, would Tim Hortons manufacture such a horrendous lid?
It’s flimsy. It’s loose. It’s weak. Once you open that hatch it’ll never be on lock-down again—you’re left babysitting your beverage until the last drop. And, could the opening be any bigger? Who thought having to pause mid-walk for every sip would be convenient, or that your car would have to be motionless to take a swig. And your coffee is of course cold by then by the way, due to that gaping hole in the top of your cup.
I thought I’d finally found my genius when I ordered my Double Double and asked for their ‘latte lid’ instead which actually does resemble Starbucks’ style, but I knew I’d made a big mistake when I looked down to find my scarf covered in large fervently fragrant dribbles.
Details matter. People notice. They rely on us to get them right, to make it easy…to feel effortless. The structure, the tense, the flavor, the finishing touch…all of it counts.
It has to be charming. It has to be tight.
Readers will always choose a good fit. After all, the content is subjective.
Noooo not your new scarf Hazy! Sorry, right, it’s about the loser lid. 😜
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Nope. Not my new scarf, mum. 🙂
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30? Dang, we grew up as kids drinking the stuff. Parents always had a pot of coffee on. You can say we were wired all the time.
Elixir of the gods!
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Well done! BTW…I’m a bit of a coffee hound myself, as you know. So it is with the greatest pleasure, and an abundance of brand shame that I inform you about my latest discover–McDonald’s lattes!! Yes, you heard me right. McDonald’s!!!! I’m embarrassed to admit that Jane and I stopped in the other day and for some reason, probably an aneurism, we ordered the lattes. They were PERFECT…AND…the perfect lids that you just push down on. What is the world coming to when I start drinking coffee from McDonald’s?
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Go ahead and be proud, Jennifer. No need to succumb to the $5 coffee!
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My hubby and I are coffee freaks. He just brought me my first of two cups this morning made with his new researched way of making coffee (it’s new to him). We spend a fortune on beans so he’s found a way to lessen our budget while making the most delicious coffee I’ve ever tasted. Got to go and concentrate on drinking while still hot. Love this piece, Hazy!
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I love that he figured this out, PC. What a guy. And, the fact that he brings you your coffee does not go amiss either!
Thank you for reading and loving. ❤
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This is true, and it speaks well to the importance of craft in writing. That said, if you’re on the ball 95% of the time, people will also forgive the occasional typo. I mean, how many errors have you found on my blog?! And yet, to my wonder, you still read it. 🙂
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LOL, I might be slightly behind right now, but of course I still read your blog! You just don’t find my typos because my mum catches them all and notifies me the minute I post them! ;0)
Anyway, as I’ve said before, typos are a sign of intelligence. It means our brains are thinking faster than we can type. Lucky us!
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