I have a problem. I’m addicted to caffeine.
Coffee - I can't think without it. Photo: Alex Fairhill. |
I’m not an addict in the sense that I must have six cups a day or I’ll turn into a monster – in fact, if I have too much I get jittery. I’ve had one energy drink in my life, while working a double shift; and I couldn’t concentrate, didn’t sleep that night, and vowed never again to touch the stuff.
Using a pod machine, I make one coffee when I get up. I’ll have
a second about 10am, but if I have caffeine after 2pm I won’t sleep. Fair
warning to restaurateurs – if I order a post-dinner decaf and you give me full-strength,
I’ll know. At 3am, my racing brain
will be proof.
I recently ran out of full-strength pods and have been drinking
decaf, using it as an opportunity to detox and to slow down. I thought I was
going well.
Signs of addiction can be physical, like waking up with headaches;
or can affect other people – like today. We carpool the school run with another
family – and normally they’ll walk to school in the morning and I’ll drive
their son home after school. We’ve had terrible weather this week and I offered
to drive this morning if needed.
This morning I got a text message: ‘We have a lift,’ and replied
‘No worries. See you at school.’ I took my son to class, and didn’t see the
other family but didn’t think much of it – parents were dropping off kids and
rushing back to dry cars. I returned to my car, then saw a message on my phone –
‘Are you on the way’. I re-examined the first message – it actually said ‘Can
we get a lift.’ I’d completely misread it. Words that I won’t repeat went
through my head as I gunned it as quickly and safely as I could in a 40km/h
school zone and drove towards our friends’ house, coming across them halfway to
school. Apologising profusely, I drove their son to school. Luckily my friend saw
the humour in it all, but I felt terrible. We had a laugh about it over a
full-strength cafe coffee – my shout – and once the caffeine fired up my
synapses I clicked that it wasn’t an isolated event.
On the weekend, I spent half of Auskick watching a kid run
around before realising it wasn’t my son. They look similar, especially from a
distance, but they were in different groups – and there’s no excuse for not
recognising your own child!
Last week I thought Thursday was Friday. I almost took my son to a regular sporting commitment a day early and thought the evening TV schedule was wrong.
On the morning of my recent 40th birthday I got a cup out of the drawer, put it under the coffee machine spout, then got a cup out of the drawer and wondered why there was already a cup under the spout – all in the space of five seconds, but I put that down to ‘age’. And possibly shock at turning 40.
It’s not unusual for me to make coffee without putting a pod in; or make two because I’ve forgotten about the first, half-drunk one. I’ll forget what I’m saying mid-sentence. I have turned up to an appointment a day early. All of this has happened when I haven’t had that caffeine kick-start.
So I acknowledge I have a problem – my brain cannot physically function without caffeine. As far as problems go it’s not a bad one, but I have restocked my coffee supplies today. And I’ll never try the morning kick-start with decaf again.
I'm pleased to report that after switching back to the caffeinated pods I have not forgotten to take anyone to school for the past two mornings!
ReplyDeleteHi Alex,
ReplyDeleteLOVED your quirky post on caffeine addictions
I really can relate ... Karen :)