
This might be slightly controversial, but tea has always felt more honest to me than coffee.
Coffee often arrives with ambition. Productivity. Hustle culture. The promise that after one cup, you will suddenly become more awake, more focused, more efficient.
Tea asks for much less.
It doesn’t demand transformation. It simply sits beside you quietly.
Maybe that is why tea people often feel different too. Tea drinkers rarely seem in a rush to convince you that you’re drinking it incorrectly. There’s less urgency around the experience. Less performance.
Even tea shops feel softer somehow.
Of course, this is not entirely fair to coffee. There are thoughtful coffee cultures all over the world, filled with care, craftsmanship, and ritual. But coffee spaces often carry a certain momentum with them. Orders shouted across counters. Laptops open immediately. Drinks designed to be consumed quickly before moving on to the next task.
Tea tends to resist that energy.
A pot of tea naturally slows things down. You cannot really rush multiple infusions. Conversations stretch longer than intended. Silence feels less awkward.
Even the act of waiting for tea feels different.
In many traditional tea cultures, slowness was never treated as inconvenience. Whether in Chinese tea houses or Japanese tea gatherings, the pace itself was part of the experience. The tea was not simply fuel for productivity.
It was an invitation to pause.
Perhaps that is why tea continues attracting people who are quietly tired of everything feeling optimized all the time. Tea does not ask us to become better versions of ourselves before we deserve the cup.
It simply asks us to sit down and drink.
And honestly, that feels increasingly rare these days.
— Maria Tan
On tea, culture, and everyday rituals.
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