御冷 ミァハ | Mihie MIACH (
imitationsoul) wrote2018-01-14 10:22 pm
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UN: werther
STATUS: Student (Grade 10)
ACCOLADES: /
BIO: "It is over life, throughout its unfolding, that power establishes its dominion; death is power's limit, the moment that escapes it; death becomes the most secret aspect of existence, the most private."
-Michel Foucault
mid-morning on 1/19
[Has she grappled with which is better since waking up?
...yes.]
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[ And she's only half-facetious, because as much as it's inconsequential, she's never thought about it and is starting now. ]
Both have their merits, but when it comes down to it, my vote should go to coffee. It's a little gross in taste, but its immediate affect on alertness as well as the social acceptability on using it to one's favor... Yes, coffee is definitely fascinating.
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That's a good point. Nothing wakes me up faster than coffee... and it has a sort of commonality! Everyone has coffee to get up in the morning.
Though... I think there's something to be said for all of the presentation and festivities around tea?
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You raise a valid point! Tea around East Asia especially really is an artifact that shows different trappings of society and tradition. Our Japan, Korea, China... even if they were historically often at odds, in their shared love for tea ceremonies, they cannot deny how much they affected one another.
China found tea so integral to its cultural identity that even weddings used to involce tea ceremonies in the past!
But coffee also has ceremonies! I don't think either of us have ever been to Ethiopia, but I hear that ceremonial coffee is an important aspect of social life there.
How do you take your own tea and coffe, Daiba Nana?
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It's true! Tea came to define a lot there. And I remember tea ceremonies were some of my favorite things to attend, on holidays and at events.
Coffee does have some. I never heard about ceremonial coffee in Ethiopia. But I do know that coffeehouses in Austria were important... and the Ottoman Empire, too?
I like my tea with sugar. And preferably a snack!
And coffee with just a little milk.
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Tea I take as is. I like black tea a lot, but I hate tea ceremonies. It's nice to drink when reading, however. I don't say no to snacks, but they leave crumbles all over my books and I can't stand it. Having a plain cup of tea is the most elegant way to accompany a novel, if you ask me.
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Ah, I didn't even think about crumbs in books! That is annoying. But you're right, a good cup of tea and a novel... well, there's something just picture perfect about that. Especially the right cup of tea.
Unfortunately, my books have gotten a little crumb...y?