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Life's too interesting to pick a niche

How I Learned to Drink Coffee

6/21/2025

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Beyond the Beginner ESL B2-C1 level version with video here. 
A disposable dark grey coffee cup with a white lid and brown heat sleeve stands against a light gray background
I passed the age of 40 without learning to drink coffee, even though I grew up in the United States where everyone, including my parents, drinks coffee. Despite these cultural influences,
I somehow developed a preference for hot black tea with milk and a few granules of sugar. 

For my entire adult life, hot tea was my caffeinated beverage of choice. If that was unavailable, I would drink that iconic Southern brew called sweet tea or iced tea.

One day in the spring of 2025, WaWa opened a location in my town. To advertise their opening, they put coupons in advertising mail. The thicker cardstock caught my attention and I noticed that the coupon sheet offered me a free hot latte. I took that as my sign to give coffee another try.

This wasn’t a decision made out of the blue. I had been wondering if I should give coffee another chance. Coffee is such an important part of so many social cultures that I worried about limiting my opportunities by not partaking, especially when traveling. Plus, tastes change as we age. Also, I have always liked coffee ice cream, so why didn’t I like coffee as a beverage? These thoughts and the appearance of the coupon gave me a guilt-free way to try coffee again. Well, I might feel a little guilty for throwing away food, but I wouldn’t have financial regret. 

At the gas station food counter, I ordered a hot mocha latte. I figured that I like chocolate and lattes have a lot of milk. Milk is what keeps tea from tasting bitter or acidic, so maybe it would do the same for coffee. 

To my surprise, I enjoyed the latte. Apparently, with enough milk and sweetener, I do like coffee. That started a month-long craving for hot, sweet, coffee. 

For the sake of my budget, after trying a macchiato for comparison to the latte, I limited myself to one $2 coffee with Irish Cream-flavored creamer per week. I looked forward to that coffee all week.

I experimented with the ratio of coffee to sweetened creamer. The perfect balance for me is about ⅔ coffee and ⅓ creamer. I also discovered that I don’t like it when creamer and flavorings make the coffee too sweet. I want a smooth blend, not a mouthful of sugar flavor.

I tried Sheetz coffee because it is freshly ground instead of in a dispenser like at WaWa. I don’t know what the difference is, but I like WaWa’s coffee better. WaWa offers light, medium, and dark roasts. I prefer the dark roast. The light roast disappears into the creamer. Creamer alone is not the taste I look forward to. 

About a month later, I went on a trip. I tried the coffee at the cafeteria near the hotel. It was bitter and reminded me of why I disliked coffee. So, I experimented. I filled my mug with 1 part hot cocoa, then added 1.5 parts coffee, topping it all off with 0.5 parts vanilla-flavored creamer. Thoroughly mixed, this beverage was palatable and got me through an exhausting week.  

Back at home, my craving for coffee was broken. I returned to drinking hot tea. Still, I know that I do like some forms of coffee. This is a relief because I want to fit in wherever I travel. Maybe I will never be able to drink black coffee without milk, but surely being able to enjoy some type of coffee drink opens up opportunities for social connection that I would miss if I drank no coffee.
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Jill Hames, Writer and Musician
Jill Hames is a writer, musician, and ESL teacher who, at the age of four, said she wanted to learn every language in the world. She hasn’t managed that yet, but is proud to have taught herself enough Swahili to understand context from native speakers. She has a B.A. in Music and Spanish, a Masters in Library and Information Science, is TEFL.org 168-hour certified to teach English as a second language, and is working towards a Master of Divinity.

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