Cheryl Katz

From scratch.

Slow roll.

In the first five minutes of wakeness, I don’t have much to offer in the way of basic human coordination. Let’s just say I can’t handle large, round items without dropping them. A child’s easy to grab toy would wind up on the floor without doubt.

About five minutes on, I have come around enough to perform the four-minute manual labor of brewing a pot of coffee, for which I am thankful.

Before I even get the coffee, I’ll be running at nearly full steam, though my fingertips will still be a little bit dull and fumbling.

Which is why I hope that I will get the coffee *before* I’m quite awake enough to notice that I ran out of beans a scoop or two too early.

Nothing worse than a weak brew to get you off on the wrong foot.

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Fri, March 5 2010 » Day in the Life

2 Responses

  1. Christine March 5 2010 @ 9:10 am

    I’m gathering that the act of brewing the coffee is itself an activity that helps to wake you up, thus rendering this tip moot – but I find having a coffee maker with a timer tremendously helpful. I’m able to set it all up the night before, while I’m actually awake and functional, so when I wake up I can just stumble over and get some lovely ready coffee. :)

  2. Cheryl March 6 2010 @ 1:27 pm

    It’s not entirely simple like that… because we do have the auto coffee maker and when I’ve used it in the past I have deeply, deeply loved it. But we don’t make coffee every day because back in the days when we made a full pot every morning, either I’d be in the jitters all day or half of it would be poured down the drain. So it’s only made on an as-needed basis, and need is evaluated in medias res.

    But you’re right, the making of the coffee does, in fact, help to wake me up.

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