Guest guest Posted March 13, 2006 Report Share Posted March 13, 2006 Hi ~ *****Thanks for the post. It was much more information than I wanted to have about my favorite beverage :-(, but I expect that I'll keep drinking my 1-2 mugs/day of 50-50 blend (half decaf/half regular). It is too great a pleasure for me to give up at this point. You wrote, " Caffeine is addictive. Personally I have to keep away from it completely, or I'll get back into it. When I quit I have horrible withdrawl symptoms: two days of horrible headaches and body aches, and then about two weeks of general listlessness. " *****Yes, I know the feeling. Now I've learned to be wiser. When I want (or need) to get off the stuff (e.g., prior to a prolonged hospital stay), I plan ahead and reduce the caffinated portion of my drink(s) by 1/3 for three days days, then another third for three days, etc. After about 10 days I'm on fully decaffinated java and can stop drinking the stuff entirely without any significant side- effects. In this manner I've avoided about 80% of the headache syndrome and have felt virutally no listlessness or malaise. (I remember the first time I quit cold-turkey: for about one week I felt as if I had the flu, minus the fever. Really yucky!) Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 13, 2006 Report Share Posted March 13, 2006 All of the recent posts notwithstanding, I still don't see a general argument against coffee; rather the opposite. Some people might not like it or tolerate it well, but it remains a source of both antioxidants and is generally correlated with health rather than disease sequellae. The notion that it raises the " set point " of hypertension has been disproven, and the focused study on some people whose hearts genetically wig out on it, well, I guess they shouldn't drink it. Clearly decaf has some problems, while I have yet to see real data on broadly negative data damning caffeine (or nicotine, sans the tars as through Nicorette, for that matter, but that's another subject). So are there any current real data damning coffee? I don't need to drink it, but frankly I believe that its likely healthier to drink 300 ml or so of it a day than to abstain or drink decaf. http://tinyurl.com/pyz48 Witness the 2004 data regarding coffee and diabetes: http://tinyurl.com/lkfwx Maco coffeRe: [ ] Re: Coffee toxic/ > >--- In , A Houle <ph18@...> wrote: > >Hi ~ > >*****Thanks for the post. It was much more information than I wanted >to have about my favorite beverage :-(, but I expect that I'll keep >drinking my 1-2 mugs/day of 50-50 blend (half decaf/half regular). >It is too great a pleasure for me to give up at this point. > >You wrote, " Caffeine is addictive. Personally I have to keep away >from it completely, or I'll get back into it. When I quit I have >horrible withdrawl symptoms: two days of horrible headaches and body >aches, and then about two weeks of general listlessness. " > >*****Yes, I know the feeling. Now I've learned to be wiser. When I >want (or need) to get off the stuff (e.g., prior to a prolonged >hospital stay), I plan ahead and reduce the caffinated portion of my >drink(s) by 1/3 for three days days, then another third for three >days, etc. After about 10 days I'm on fully decaffinated java and >can stop drinking the stuff entirely without any significant side- >effects. In this manner I've avoided about 80% of the headache >syndrome and have felt virutally no listlessness or malaise. (I >remember the first time I quit cold-turkey: for about one week I felt >as if I had the flu, minus the fever. Really yucky!) Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 13, 2006 Report Share Posted March 13, 2006 All of the recent posts notwithstanding, I still don't see a general argument against coffee; rather the opposite. Some people might not like it or tolerate it well, but it remains a source of both antioxidants and is generally correlated with health rather than disease sequellae. The notion that it raises the " set point " of hypertension has been disproven, and the focused study on some people whose hearts genetically wig out on it, well, I guess they shouldn't drink it. Clearly decaf has some problems, while I have yet to see real data on broadly negative data damning caffeine (or nicotine, sans the tars as through Nicorette, for that matter, but that's another subject). So are there any current real data damning coffee? I don't need to drink it, but frankly I believe that its likely healthier to drink 300 ml or so of it a day than to abstain or drink decaf. http://tinyurl.com/pyz48 Witness the 2004 data regarding coffee and diabetes: http://tinyurl.com/lkfwx Maco coffeRe: [ ] Re: Coffee toxic/ > >--- In , A Houle <ph18@...> wrote: > >Hi ~ > >*****Thanks for the post. It was much more information than I wanted >to have about my favorite beverage :-(, but I expect that I'll keep >drinking my 1-2 mugs/day of 50-50 blend (half decaf/half regular). >It is too great a pleasure for me to give up at this point. > >You wrote, " Caffeine is addictive. Personally I have to keep away >from it completely, or I'll get back into it. When I quit I have >horrible withdrawl symptoms: two days of horrible headaches and body >aches, and then about two weeks of general listlessness. " > >*****Yes, I know the feeling. Now I've learned to be wiser. When I >want (or need) to get off the stuff (e.g., prior to a prolonged >hospital stay), I plan ahead and reduce the caffinated portion of my >drink(s) by 1/3 for three days days, then another third for three >days, etc. After about 10 days I'm on fully decaffinated java and >can stop drinking the stuff entirely without any significant side- >effects. In this manner I've avoided about 80% of the headache >syndrome and have felt virutally no listlessness or malaise. (I >remember the first time I quit cold-turkey: for about one week I felt >as if I had the flu, minus the fever. Really yucky!) Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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