Mr. Tea
Note: this post uses portions of an old article you may have read but can now no longer find on my site. Forgive me. I’ve always wanted to reword that article. This is the (better) update.
I miss drinking tea.
“Well get up and make some you dopey fool!”
Yeah but I don’t feel like it. I haven’t felt like drinking tea for a few weeks now.
Something must be wrong.
I’m English. And like every other scraggly-toothed, stiff-upper-lipped yeoman I like my tea – nay, NEED my tea on a regular basis.
Tea is how we start/get through/end the day as well as react to football matches/deal with strange election results/conclude funerals.
In Britain, people drink an average of 1,550,600 cups a day – just over 7 Olympic-size swimming pools – a stupendous amount of tea. Hooray for India.
English tea consumption, like the mathematical equation Pi, is constant, bankable, and woven into the very fabric of the universe.
So why am I not drinking?
It’s not like I don’t have the right brand. Some people won’t drink tea unless it’s of a very special quality, grown in the magical hills of some faraway third-world country, protected by rebel insurgents and tree fairies, touched only by virgins, transported down to civilization one sack every six months and doled out to the rest of the world on a gold barter arrangement. This tea is usually sipped out of a small porcelain thimble held between the thumb and index finger with the pinky extended as far away in the other direction as humanly possible.
That ain’t me. I also dislike anything that pretends to be avant garde but is actually the product of some unholy union between Earl Grey and a dubious sounding fruit. Bergamot Orange is one such example. It’s as clear as ant’s blood and tastes like mouthwash. I’d sooner use it to scrub my car than let it slip down my throat.
I enjoy the traditional English cuppa, also known as Builder’s Tea, which is strongly brewed Ceylon with milk and sugar mixed in. Forget green tea, herbal tea, or whatever medicinal tea your local shaman alternative doctor is hawking you. They may be able to cure cancer, promote brain activity, and enhance sexual performance but do you really wanna chastise your taste buds to be a virile, intelligent lothario?
Wait, don’t answer that question.
Back to my current tea-totalling (pun intended). Maybe it’s the unbearable Philippine heat? It’s hard to drink tea when it feels like the earth’s been stuffed inside a giant leather jacket.
Or maybe it’s because I tend to drink coffee most of the time at work. Now that I have a real job with real deadlines and a real coffee machine in the pantry with tons of gourmet grains in stock, coffee has become, well, a lot easier to prep and drink, that’s for sure.
I know there’s a theological lesson buried in here somewhere. Maybe if I flip the kettle on and drop a teabag into a mug, it’ll all become clear.
Like Bergamot Orange, only better.
Stuff! 06/06/10
Another week and more random stuff from the internet.
WolframAlpha
An awesome and forward-thinking search tool developed by eccentric math genius Stephen Wolfram. Definitely one to bookmark. It’s my new toy!
Papercuts
Check out these fantastic and whimsical A4 paper sculptures by Peter Callesen. Truly amazing art.
Guatemala Sinkhole
The startling and frightening pit in photos. National Geographic compares it to other famous sinkholes from across the globe.
Porn Stats
The average age a child first sees porn online is 11. Chilling.
No Dogma, No Fruits!
“It can be difficult to convince another Christian that the doctrines of grace are biblical. I know because I’ve tried (sometimes winsomely, sometimes not). Convincing an egalitarian of complementarian is a challenge too. Ditto for any other disputed doctrine. But in my experience what’s even more difficult is convincing the average Christian that doctrine matters at all.”
Was life really created in a test tube? And does it disprove biblical creation?
“Headlines are buzzing with the news of Dr Craig Venter’s sensational “creation of a synthetic life form”… So what was actually achieved, and what does it mean?”
Believe It or Not
“I think I am very close to concluding that this whole “New Atheism” movement is only a passing fad—not the cultural watershed its purveyors imagine it to be, but simply one of those occasional and inexplicable marketing vogues that inevitably go the way of pet rocks, disco, prime-time soaps, and The Bridges of Madison County.”
Franz Reichelt
This one came out of nowhere but hey, Stuff! is random right? Anyway, it’s the interesting and tragic tale of Franz Reichelt, an “Austrian-born French tailor, inventor and parachuting pioneer, now sometimes referred to as the Flying Tailor, who is remembered for his accidental death by jumping from the Eiffel Tower while testing a wearable parachute of his own design.”


Writer, designer, father of two, husband of one. Armchair theologian. Inconsistent blogger and photographer. Still, I try.
