The healing power of slow coffee
In a world of fractured attention and constant movement, the practice of slow coffee offers a daily moment to refocus and reground.
What if you stop reading this and notice the miracle of your senses? Yes, right now. All five of them. What do you see? Do you hear anything? Listen harder. Touch something nearby, and notice its texture. Are there smells? Tastes?
Whether you’re sitting comfortably at home or on a crowded train, to anchor in your senses brings you out of the jammed space of your head, out of the past and away from the future, and back into real life now. It’s a transformative habit, this pause. It offers clarity, calm, and healing.
There are many ways to experience this. By far one of our favorites is the ritual of slow morning coffee. It’s a daily act of self care that costs little money and requires no special tools. When the world feels overwhelming, it provides 10 daily minutes of calm.
Slow coffee as pause
To pause requires patience in a world accustomed to convenience and distraction. Deliberate slowness is an act of resistance. I find this especially true at breakfast, a time when the pleasures of crispy toast and strong coffee are easily turned into mechanized experiences meant only to fuel some future productivity.
Slow coffee is a daily rebellion. A moment to give your brain a chance to reset—a reprieve from yesterday’s messes and today’s to-dos.
Here’s how to slow down and take back your morning coffee.
Go analog. Silence your notifications. Leave your phone in a different room. Try to give yourself these minutes distraction free, if possible.
Savor the smell. You may grind your own or buy it pre-ground. Either way, coffee smells amazing. Notice it. Give yourself at least five full seconds to soak it in.
Look and Listen. Watch the water pour from the pitcher or the tap. Listen as it fills the kettle or the brewer. Don’t look away. Water is one of nature’s most powerful forces. Appreciate the heck out of the fact that you have it right here in front of you.
Feel all the textures. The ground coffee, the water, the kettle or brewer, your favorite mug—they all have a different texture. They are all made up of elements, just like you. Notice the differences. Notice the sameness.
Wait. Now for the hardest part. You wait. The brewing or boiling of water takes its own time. Resist the urge to check your phone. Don’t prep your to-do list or get a head start on absolutely anything. Your only activities are for the present moment. Do some gentle stretching. Sit and watch the kettle slowly warm. Count your breaths. Notice the sights, sounds, and smells of the brewer.
Pour and watch. If you use the pour over method, there’s still the whole process of slowly swirling the water from the kettle over the grounds and watching it drip through and turn into liquid magic. So satisfying!
Savor. This may be the best moment of all—time to pour the brewed coffee into your favorite mug and enjoy the rising steam. In another act of patience, you must wait a minute or two before drinking so you don’t burn your tongue. Savor the smell, the heat, the dancing steam.
Express gratitude. When it’s time for the first sip, really notice the flavors and the chain of efforts that brought this moment to you. Consider saying “thank you” out loud. Because it’s all a modern miracle when you really think about it.
When life interrupts your slow coffee
It’s inevitable. Unless you live deep in the woods away from all distraction, life will insert itself into your slow coffee. The dog will bark, a child will wander into the kitchen demanding cereal. Your partner will need to find a missing paper. Someone will knock on the door.
All is not lost. Pet the dog. Hug the toddler. Kiss the partner. Answer the door if you must.
This is your chosen life. Your one and only. Give it the attention it deserves. Then soak right back into your moment. Because now is always here for you. Right up until the day that it isn’t.