Ode to My Morning Coffee
my daily resurrection
No day begins without your robust flavor,
you sweet little drupe,
mislabeled “bean” by a world too tired to care—
though you were born in fruit,
a cherry’s hidden stone,
a pit that quickens my pulse.
I count you as sacred,
stacked somewhere between bread and breath,
misfiled in the pyramids of need—
not quite food, not quite ritual,
but something holier than both.
And, when I order at Starbucks,
it’s a trenta, and I demand they fill it up,
no restraint, no elegant moderation—
just liquid adrenaline
sloshing over the rim.
Before you, I am unfinished—
a body without voltage,
one of the walking dead.
After you, I spark,
I clatter,
I am among the living again.
O coffee—
black oracle in a ceramic altar—
I praise your bitterness
and take it in like communion.

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