In my younger and more tasteless days, my standard answer to "How do you like your coffee?" was "The way I like my women: hot, strong, and black." For some reason, this went over better with guys than women, especially those who hadn't reached voting age yet.
But according to two recent medical studies, I seem to have been on to something. Now I just have to figure out which one to choose.
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I'd rather live a 15%-17% shorter life than wear an apron like that in front of my homies. |
The second comes courtesy of SciTechDaily. In a study involving people age 55 and over, regular coffee drinking helps to reduce the onset of frailty. But as with the other study, there's a catch. In order the reap the benefits, you need to drink four to six or more cups a day.
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First tip: convince the police you aren't a suicide bomber. |
Those several extra thousand heartbeats that the monitor recorded didn't make me several thousand times healthier. I spent the next decade or so drinking decaf until eventually easing myself up to one or two cups a day, where I remain today.
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Hey kid, didn't I tell you? Lay off the milk and sugar! |
Then there was another study that found that one cup of coffee prevented hearing loss by 15%. The catch: only men reaped that benefit. Yes, it's true: coffee is sexist. Flip side: husbands have no reason to claim they didn't hear their wives tell them to take out the garbage.
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No word if cigarettes help or hinder. |
What do all these studies have in common? They're all from Europe. So many different countries, so many different results!
So here's what American smarty-pants have to say: Java jolters who have one to three cups have a 15% lower risk of dying in the next nine to eleven years. Add a fourth cup and you have a 64% lower chance of "all-cause mortality" than non-drinkers. As I scan the news headlines, I'm not sure which group I want to be part of anymore.
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