Feeling low as the ground(s)
We get free coffee at work. Do I put lots of sugar in because it almost counts as food, and will give me energy; or do I just rely on the fact that coffee suppresses appetite?
No poll, can't be arsed.
No poll, can't be arsed.
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Hmm.. maybe that's why my caffine withdrawal last week was so painful, I vary the amounts quite a lot but I pretty much *always* have caffine.
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Mind you, why would you take the advice of a tweed-hockey-sticks stylee dog trainer?
I think you should decide on taste: I no longer like sugar in coffee.
I take sugar with tea, though.
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Yeah, but you is weird.
Never understood the English habit of adulterating tea with sugar and cow juice.
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Is this just because the Scots do it (like everything else) more sensibly, or because you're just so cosmopolitan?
Sugar with ordinary tea (e.g. Tetley) is fairly understandable to me, the tea is a bit grim and tanniny & putting sugar in it helps to make it palatable. I wouldn't dream of putting sugar (or milk) in any of the look-at-me-I'm-so-middle-class teas I drink by preference.
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Except, obviously, in Chinese restaurants.
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No; I meant Historicaly: the Chinese, from whom the English got tea, didn't drink it that way. Why did the English start doing it that way?
Scots were initially coffee drinkers, and later enthusiatically adopted tea, a la anglais, with milk and sugar - they'd have added fat like the Nepalis if they'd known about it, I shouldn't wonder.
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Just, y'know, a data point.
- A
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IME sugar doesn't help with depression, or rather it gives me a brief rush of energy and then a crash afterwards. Not great.
Rosemary is supposed to be good for depression. We have plenty at home, I will make rosemary tea.
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I can't drink tea with sugar in (it's one of the few tastes that really make me gag for no apparent reason), but otherwise I'm not too fussy. Black coffee and tea with milk (no sugar in either) preferably, but I'll drink other combinations. Had one of those exasperated-with-parents-getting-old moments the last time I was down there, Dad made me a cup of coffee and put milk in it. So I started drinking it, put it down and went out of the room for a few minutes to find the newspaper, coming back to find it had been poured down the sink (by Dad, who was arguing with Mum about it when I returned) because Andrew doesn't have milk in his coffee. There's something that happens to people's brains when they get past sixty that makes them take all this terribly seriously - my late grandmother wouldn't have a cup of tea at 3.25 because it was "too early", then five minutes later she'd wander into the kitchen because it was time for her cup of tea.
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