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Coffee Outside

 

Momentous and wondrous things — adventure, a piece of art, a new project — begin with a seed of an idea, a cup of coffee, and then the decision to begin.

Whether it is ‘putting the kettle on’ in Britain when hatching plans, Sweden’s daily fika to savour life’s small joys, or ‘grabbing a coffee’ in North America to toss around exciting ideas, we believe that good stuff comes from coffee. 

We appreciate the familiarity of a favourite mug, the performance of the preparation or the ritual of going to a favourite cafe. We take pleasure in the caesura, the space created by pausing for coffee, and perhaps a faint glimpse of the Buddhist notion that you can experience the universe by drinking a bowl of tea. 

So coffee is where we are going to begin this new journey towards exploring the link between adventure, creativity, curiosity, and wellbeing. [By the way ‘tea’ can be used interchangeably with ‘coffee’ throughout. Perhaps not ‘Beer’ though, if you’re reading this early in the day!]

What if we try something different with our daily ritual? Nothing dramatic, nothing to worry about or procrastinate. Just a tiny step towards something different. Sometimes that can be all you need to leave your rut. Nudge the helm, trim the sail of a small boat leaving Java and you’ll shift your landfall from Kenya to Yemen. 

Today we nudge you to take your coffee outside and experience an extra sliver of the universe. A cup of coffee in the fresh air cracks open the space to allow ideas to percolate and brew. For adventure ideas. For a blackbird waiting for this moment to arise. For creative impulses and a breath of breeze. The time to observe, notice and appreciate the world outside your front door. 

As we begin this journey together we have to respectfully disagree with Bilbo Baggins. He advised Frodo that going out your door was a dangerous business, for there’s no knowing where you might be swept off to. But we see the possibility of surprise and serendipity out there as marvellous things, invitations to exploration and to everyday, simple activities that fill life with joy and inspiration.

The hardest part of any adventure is what Norwegians call the ‘dørstokkmila‘, the doorstep mile, cajoling yourself to leave the comfortable, familiar house, step out of a rut and into the world. The doorstep mile is the longest mile of any journey.

Before Russians begin a journey they sit down together and pause in silence to clear their heads and bring good fortune. The tradition is called ‘sidet na chemodanakh or ‘sitting on your suitcases’. Our bags are not yet packed, but we have now begun to dream.

Abraham Lincoln supposedly said that if he had six hours to chop down a tree, he would spend the first four hours sharpening the axe. Similarly, when we plan an adventure, a book, or a new work of art, we first of all pause for coffee. 

Who are you? Where are you? How will you take your coffee today? We want to hear from you, and where these outdoor moments take place. Perhaps you’ll sit amongst the pigeons on a park bench with your latte. Or with an espresso and a croissant at a terracotta-tiled cafe beside the emerald waters of the Adriatic. You may walk outside in the middle of winter barefoot, standing on your porch in bare feet, feeling the cold of the season, the hot mug in your hands. You could fill a thermos and set out on foot for the woods. Or you might prefer to brew your coffee outside. A gas stove and a sprinkle of instant. A jetboil and French press. Aeropress. Bialetti. Briki. A kelly kettle or a coffee bag. Java drip, filter, press pot or percolator. A Moka pot and wanderlust for al-Makha. Perhaps you’ll gather twigs and light a fire for cowboy coffee or forage, roast and grind a beech nut substitute coffee. Or maybe you’ll simply carry your cup from kitchen to sunlit garden and sit for a while, caging the minute within its nets of gold.

We are fascinated by the concept of adventure, something that often comes with a sense of uncertainty and unknown. This past year has presented us with ample amounts of uncertainty in our everyday, and our thoughts about –and approach to– ‘adventure’ has most certainly shifted. Our journeys now are closer to home. We are challenged to stay curious and find joy in our most trivial moments. It’s easy for things to become routine and mundane. This is why we should use something as small as a change in daily ritual to bring us a hint of what we have missed. It holds the possibility of surprise and serendipity, and offers an invitation to exploration and the simple activities that fill life with joy and inspiration.

Whilst we doubtlessly want adventure, we also crave ways to slow down and be present, to connect with the world around us, and generate the opportunity to pursue our creativity. Mark this cup of coffee as the beginning of that quest. To consciously look askew at the way we do things. An interlude to pay attention and be grateful. And a chance, with the final sip, to acknowledge how easy that was and to commit to try something similar again. 

This might merely be drinking a cup of coffee outside. But it may also be the birth of a new adventure. We do not yet know. But we have begun to find out.

[A collaboration with Anna Brones – the masterful papercut artist.]

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Comments

  1. dexey Posted

    Have you come across the coffeeneurs of the ‘Chasing Mailboxes’ blog?

    Reply
  2. Clare Ashton Posted

    …our journeys now are closer to home…

    So today I will begin with my brew outside in my garden then take the family onto the local Lowton Moss to have a micro adventure. Thank you for the inspiration xx

    Reply
  3. Phil Posted

    Weird but never thought of this through lockdown – wonderful

    Reply
  4. Just wanted to comment to say I thought this was a beautifully written piece that gave me butterflies of excitement thinking about something so simple as that morning cup of coffee

    Reply
  5. HI Alastair, I love this little idea that can make such a big impact on my day. Anna Brones work is lovely- I want to check out her books too. But what this coffee moment has really spurred me to do is “Thank you” for sharing your microadventures and especially your books read in your own voice. With a 5-year-old intrepid daughter, I was ready for microadventures. We were even scoping out places to sneak off and sleep under the stars from the Bart train. But then my mom got cancer and for 2 years that consumed her, me, and all my energy to venture. She died late last summer and all that time I was caring for her and not daring to leave her side I listened to you read to me from “Doorstep Mile”, ” Microadventures” and “My Midsummer Morning”. With days getting longer and hopes for vaccines getting brighter I am poised ready to microadventure with my daughter now. Thank you for being a bright star to keep my barrings in dark times. Taska

    Reply
    • Alastair Posted

      Gosh, Taska. What a lovely message to receive. Thank you so much. I hope that adventures can help you find a brighter path in the times to come.

      Reply
  6. Rachael Posted

    This is beautifully written, and what a lovely and inspirational call to step outside of the ordinary. Thank you!

    Reply
  7. Wonderfully written piece. Our micro adventures have gotten smaller and more local through lockdown but for me, coffee outside has been a chance to sit in nature (even within the city) and meditate in my own way.

    I’m a big fan of the S24O/micro adventure and coffee outside is the same thing distilled. Here’s one of my latest lockdown CO moments: https://theeverydaycyclist.wordpress.com/2020/11/23/coffee-outside-by-bike-at-halewood-triangle-park/

    Reply
  8. Andrew Moore Posted

    Hi Al, bright blue, clear skies here in lovely Lancs, right on the edge of the West Pennine Moors near Rivington Pike. working from home, so this afternoon I took an extended coffee break and fired up my woodgas stove out in the back yard; watching the flames dance out of the holes for the secondary burn had me properly present and that resulted in the most mindful cup of aeropress’ed deliciousness I’ve had in months! Hatching plans for a microadventure in the morning with the 4 yr old and 8 yr old boys, which WILL involve being in the woods for a fair time!

    Reply
  9. Brian Lunn Posted

    Hi Al, We’ve talked before about taking steps to get the life you want. Well this morning’s coffee (a rare Rwandan pour-over) was taken on the balcony of the new house watching the sun come up over the Cromarty Firth. We’ve taken a leap to live somewhere where the dørstokkmila takes us into a forest and we can walk into wilderness. An upside of SARS-CoV-2 means I can work from my shed and so we leapt…

    Reply

 
 

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