Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I love the smell and don't care about coffee breath. My husband is the only person in his family who drinks coffee. The rest of them are constantly taking naps and complaining about being tired. Losers.
This made me laugh.
Hysterical.![]()
I'm just imagining what the coffee haters on this thread look like.
Yikes! I was kind of thinking the same thing about coffee drinkers! If you need coffee that bad to wake up and have energy than you aren't very healthy! Can't imagine what you all look like. Not sure the coffee haters are the losers. I'm a f/t WM and would consider myself an athlete and a morning person with no need for coffee. Have always hated the smell and taste and thought that people who *needed* coffee need a crutch to get through each day.
Anonymous wrote:Do you have any kids?
I didn't get on the coffee wagon til I had my DS when I was 35.
I never needed the boast when I was younger. But it really does help me get going in the mornings.
Anonymous wrote:Am I the only one who thinks this? I can't stand the smell of coffee, coffee breath, or the smell of coffee shops.
In college I dreaded coffee shop study groups. I always went and didn't complain but silently I wished we could meet someone where else. Sometimes I would suggest an alternate location but I understood why the rest of the coffee loving world thought it was a convenient meeting spot.
Don't get me wrong. I am not a health nut or a goody-two shoes. I eat sugar and will drink on occasion, I just never found coffee appealing.
When I tell people I never had a cup of coffee in my 40 years they are always surprised. I don't go into the whole I hate the smell of it thing, I just accept the coffee date and order tea.
FWIW my father did drink coffee when I was growing up but my mother didn't start drinking it until she was older (maybe close to the age I am now). We never had a coffee maker at home (parents still don't now) but everyone else in my family does drink coffee. Typically at work or at a restaurant.
So just wondering, am I really the only person who doesn't like coffee? The lines at Starbucks and Filter would say yes but I have to think there is at least one other person who agrees.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I love the smell and don't care about coffee breath. My husband is the only person in his family who drinks coffee. The rest of them are constantly taking naps and complaining about being tired. Losers.
This made me laugh.
Hysterical.![]()
I'm just imagining what the coffee haters on this thread look like.
Yikes! I was kind of thinking the same thing about coffee drinkers! If you need coffee that bad to wake up and have energy than you aren't very healthy! Can't imagine what you all look like. Not sure the coffee haters are the losers. I'm a f/t WM and would consider myself an athlete and a morning person with no need for coffee. Have always hated the smell and taste and thought that people who *needed* coffee need a crutch to get through each day.
Your smugness is your crutch. We all have one.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I love the smell and don't care about coffee breath. My husband is the only person in his family who drinks coffee. The rest of them are constantly taking naps and complaining about being tired. Losers.
This made me laugh.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I love the smell and don't care about coffee breath. My husband is the only person in his family who drinks coffee. The rest of them are constantly taking naps and complaining about being tired. Losers.
This made me laugh.
Hysterical.![]()
I'm just imagining what the coffee haters on this thread look like.
Yikes! I was kind of thinking the same thing about coffee drinkers! If you need coffee that bad to wake up and have energy than you aren't very healthy! Can't imagine what you all look like. Not sure the coffee haters are the losers. I'm a f/t WM and would consider myself an athlete and a morning person with no need for coffee. Have always hated the smell and taste and thought that people who *needed* coffee need a crutch to get through each day.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I love the smell and don't care about coffee breath. My husband is the only person in his family who drinks coffee. The rest of them are constantly taking naps and complaining about being tired. Losers.
This made me laugh.
Hysterical.![]()
I'm just imagining what the coffee haters on this thread look like.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I love the smell and don't care about coffee breath. My husband is the only person in his family who drinks coffee. The rest of them are constantly taking naps and complaining about being tired. Losers.
This made me laugh.
Anonymous wrote:I love the smell and don't care about coffee breath. My husband is the only person in his family who drinks coffee. The rest of them are constantly taking naps and complaining about being tired. Losers.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Am I the only one who thinks this? I can't stand the smell of coffee, coffee breath, or the smell of coffee shops.
In college I dreaded coffee shop study groups. I always went and didn't complain but silently I wished we could meet someone where else. Sometimes I would suggest an alternate location but I understood why the rest of the coffee loving world thought it was a convenient meeting spot.
Don't get me wrong. I am not a health nut or a goody-two shoes. I eat sugar and will drink on occasion, I just never found coffee appealing.
When I tell people I never had a cup of coffee in my 40 years they are always surprised. I don't go into the whole I hate the smell of it thing, I just accept the coffee date and order tea.
FWIW my father did drink coffee when I was growing up but my mother didn't start drinking it until she was older (maybe close to the age I am now). We never had a coffee maker at home (parents still don't now) but everyone else in my family does drink coffee. Typically at work or at a restaurant.
So just wondering, am I really the only person who doesn't like coffee? The lines at Starbucks and Filter would say yes but I have to think there is at least one other person who agrees.
+1 we must be twins. I hate meetings because of the coffee smell!
+1
coffee is foul. i hate sitting in meetings where everyone brings coffee - it's truly nauseating.
coffee breath is even worse.
Anonymous wrote:Am I the only one who thinks this? I can't stand the smell of coffee, coffee breath, or the smell of coffee shops.
In college I dreaded coffee shop study groups. I always went and didn't complain but silently I wished we could meet someone where else. Sometimes I would suggest an alternate location but I understood why the rest of the coffee loving world thought it was a convenient meeting spot.
Don't get me wrong. I am not a health nut or a goody-two shoes. I eat sugar and will drink on occasion, I just never found coffee appealing.
When I tell people I never had a cup of coffee in my 40 years they are always surprised. I don't go into the whole I hate the smell of it thing, I just accept the coffee date and order tea.
FWIW my father did drink coffee when I was growing up but my mother didn't start drinking it until she was older (maybe close to the age I am now). We never had a coffee maker at home (parents still don't now) but everyone else in my family does drink coffee. Typically at work or at a restaurant.
So just wondering, am I really the only person who doesn't like coffee? The lines at Starbucks and Filter would say yes but I have to think there is at least one other person who agrees.
Anonymous wrote:Am I the only one who thinks this? I can't stand the smell of coffee, coffee breath, or the smell of coffee shops.
In college I dreaded coffee shop study groups. I always went and didn't complain but silently I wished we could meet someone where else. Sometimes I would suggest an alternate location but I understood why the rest of the coffee loving world thought it was a convenient meeting spot.
Don't get me wrong. I am not a health nut or a goody-two shoes. I eat sugar and will drink on occasion, I just never found coffee appealing.
When I tell people I never had a cup of coffee in my 40 years they are always surprised. I don't go into the whole I hate the smell of it thing, I just accept the coffee date and order tea.
FWIW my father did drink coffee when I was growing up but my mother didn't start drinking it until she was older (maybe close to the age I am now). We never had a coffee maker at home (parents still don't now) but everyone else in my family does drink coffee. Typically at work or at a restaurant.
So just wondering, am I really the only person who doesn't like coffee? The lines at Starbucks and Filter would say yes but I have to think there is at least one other person who agrees.