Anonymous wrote:Surprise to see that teens are drinking coffee already. My kids are younger, I thought coffee/caffeine is not good for kids.
Also, whenever I do get a goods night rest, I often am horribly groggy the next morning. Drinking coffee is a ritual that helps some of us slowly wake up.
Anonymous wrote:That seems messed up to me? It seems bad even when adults say that. If you’ve had a good night of sleep (and you should be arranging your schedule so that you have) why can’t you be alert and function before coffee?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m a grown woman and I don’t want anyone to talk to me before I’ve had my coffee in the morning. I’m not surprised that a teenager feels the same.
Really? and you take pride on that?
Anonymous wrote:ADHD runs in our family.
My ADHD teen can't get organized easily before his meds.
I have a very mild form of ADHD and can get by with caffeine.
And yes, I have often told my kids not to bother me before my morning cup of black tea.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don’t even know if that’s a caffeine addiction or if coffee is the issue. I like to wake up slowly so I tell people I can’t talk until I have a cup of coffee and everyone leaves me alone. So it might be a way of getting space in the morning.
I came on here to say this. It’s not the coffee for me - it’s a societally acceptable way to have a bit of a slow start, some alone time to regroup and get ready for the day. If I just said I was still waking up or if I told everyone they had to leave me alone for an hour in the morning, everyone would be annoyed by me. But I can say I haven’t had my coffee yet haha! And everyone gets it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:That seems messed up to me? It seems bad even when adults say that. If you’ve had a good night of sleep (and you should be arranging your schedule so that you have) why can’t you be alert and function before coffee?
Teens can’t arrange their schedules because public schools are not given enough money to run sufficient buses for HS to start at 10 or 11 AM. The only way for teens to arrange their schedule that is currently feasible is homeschooling. And DCUM has already decided all homeschooled teens are depressed, anxious socially awkward outcasts who do not know how to have a conversation with their peers.
Anonymous wrote:I’m a grown woman and I don’t want anyone to talk to me before I’ve had my coffee in the morning. I’m not surprised that a teenager feels the same.
Anonymous wrote:That seems messed up to me? It seems bad even when adults say that. If you’ve had a good night of sleep (and you should be arranging your schedule so that you have) why can’t you be alert and function before coffee?