Coffee Addiction — Give Up Coffee? Me? Never!
Everyone in this world is addicted to one thing or another. Anytime you crave something, whether it's harmful or not, it's an addiction. Is a coffee addiction harmful? If you believe what some other folks have written, you may be inclined to quit drinking coffee entirely. I'm not saying they're wrong about coffee addiction. I just believe it's what they believe.
People Who Gave Up Coffee
Motivational writer Steve Pavlina wrote "How to Give Up Coffee" back in 2005. He didn't take sides on the issue of whether it was good for you or not, based on studies, but leaned toward the negative because caffeine is a drug that can cause addiction.
In 2007, Henrik Edberg of the Positivity Blog wrote "How I Quit Drinking Coffee and the Benefits I've Experienced". Clearly, this man believed that caffeine was all negative. He included "The Caffeine Curve" picture as the lead-in picture to illustrate his point.
Last year, the person behind The Daily Mind wrote "Give Up Coffee: How To Quit Coffee With Meditation". This is another person who believes coffee addiction is a bad thing. He (or she) offers the kind of help you'd expect for someone who needs drug addiction help.
There are more, but I think you get my drift. Most people tend to think coffee addiction as being bad, even if they still drink coffee.
My Coffee Addiction
I can't claim to be addicted to coffee. I sometimes skip days of drinking it. Yes, I drink regular coffee, not the unleaded kind. I've only experienced caffeine withdrawals one time and it had nothing to do with coffee. In fact, I'm not even sure the headaches I got were from caffeine withdrawals.
In 1983, the US Navy ship I was on ran out of soda. We were sitting off the coast of Beirut, Lebanon for about a month when it happened. I started getting headaches when I couldn't drink soda (and I only had one or two a day anyway). I thought that drinking coffee would alleviate the symptoms and headed to the mess deck. The headaches went away about a day later, so I doubt they had anything to do with caffeine.
I don't get headaches when I don't drink coffee or tea, so I'm assuming that I'm not addicted to caffeine even though I consume a few cups of coffee a day. If I can skip entire days without having coffee or tea, and not get a headache or crave them, then it can't be an addiction.
I suppose people react to chemical addictions differently. I just know my own coffee addiction doesn't bother ME in the least. I think people who compare a coffee or caffeine addiction to a drug or alcohol addiction and requiring drug treatment have one or two screws loose. There is no comparison.
In my case, giving up coffee just isn't an option I'm willing to consider.
(Image source: Shrunken from "We Are a Nation of Starbucks Addicts" at My Pinoy Humor Blog.)
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I've always stayed clear of the foul brew.
On a similar note I recently saw a product called e-cigarettes. They were metal pipes resembling cigarettes that emulate smoking with nicotine capsules.
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I completely agree with your conclusions.
Caffeine and drugs and alcohol addictions are not even remotely close to the same level.
I have personally drank coffee for 20 years and I notice that I get a headache in the afternoon if I haven't had my coffee. I know there is something I should do about it, so I started drinking red bull, but I don't think that is a good alternative.
When I was in MBA school, I almost needed to have coffee intravenously injected… It's a lifesaver when you have tons of case studies, group research, and statistical volumes to go over. I don't know if I would have graduated without this magical fluid.
Addiction shmaddiction, one venti latte extra foamy please!
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Yeah coffee is a lovely thing for me, I don't know if I could give it up. I worked at a coffee shop for 5 years and I just love that smell in the morning, especially on a cold overcast day.
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