By Danielle Madsen
You don’t start out with coffee cups. You start with single-serve espressos and chai lattes at the coffee shop around the corner from your co-op. But a coffee together after work becomes morning coffee for two. And, suddenly, you’ve moved in together and have cupboards to fill. So you do.
Thrift-store ceramics sit by travel cups from when you gave up Starbucks for rent. Then your alma mater mug gets lost in the boxes you bring to your first house. You hide that god-awful teacup your brother-in-law brought back from Beijing next to a Rudolph cup that only ever shows up in spring. The one in front says: “World’s Best Dad” with stains from four-AM fillings but not a single scratch. None of your coffee cups match.
When the first mug cracked, you thought it wouldn’t matter, but then they started to shatter. You end up, somehow, in battles over alimony and the kids’ college funds and that broken-down crockpot, and you forget to put your coffee cups into the divorce proceedings. When it’s finally over, you’re both too bitter, too broken, to give each other anything–even a worthless old mug. So they all get thrown in the trash.
You never walk down to the bakery around the corner from your new condo, and you’re too used to two morning coffees to try single-serve espressos. So you fill the cupboards with rows of shiny new mugs. And all of your coffee cups match.
Danielle Madsen is a junior at the University of Alabama at Birmingham studying public health with the intention of going to medical school. Her editorials have appeared in the Birmingham Times.
Image by Emre Can Acer courtesy of Pexels
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