I used to think I had a boss.
A human one. With emails, meetings, and phrases like “let’s sync up.”
But over time, I realized the truth:
My real manager is coffee.
And unlike my actual manager, coffee never pretends I have work-life balance.
Step 1: The Morning Briefing
Every day starts the same way.
I open my eyes.
Before I can think, coffee whispers:
“We’re running late.”
No greetings. No small talk. Just immediate operational pressure.
And suddenly I’m moving like I’ve been assigned tasks I don’t remember accepting.
Step 2: The First Cup = Onboarding
The first coffee is not a drink.
It is onboarding.
Within minutes:
- My brain boots up
- My personality loads
- My ability to tolerate emails activates
Without coffee, I am “offline mode.”
With coffee, I am “slightly functional employee with questionable optimism.”
Step 3: The Productivity Negotiation
After cup one, coffee becomes my manager in a meeting titled:
“Let’s be realistic today.”
Coffee says:
- “We will focus for 3 hours max.”
- “We will ignore unnecessary tasks.”
- “We will panic efficiently only when required.”
I agree. I always agree.
Coffee has better authority than any calendar invite.
Step 4: The Midday Power Shift
By noon, coffee changes tone.
Now it is less “supportive manager” and more:
“Why are we tired already?”
It begins assigning additional tasks:
- one more cup
- one more deadline push
- one more questionable decision that future me will deal with
I do not argue.
Coffee knows my limits better than I do.
Step 5: The Overconfidence Phase
At peak caffeine levels, coffee promotes me internally:
- From “tired employee”
- To “CEO of getting things done”
I start:
- replying to emails too fast
- saying “quick question” in meetings with confidence I do not possess
- believing I can finish 6 hours of work in 45 minutes
Coffee does not stop me.
Coffee observes.
Step 6: The Crash Meeting
Later in the day, coffee holds a final meeting:
“Performance Review.”
It says nothing.
It just removes productivity.
Suddenly:
- typing slows
- thoughts buffer
- existence feels optional
This is the “you should’ve paced yourself” phase.
Step 7: The After-Hours Reminder
Just when I think the day is over, coffee sends a final notification:
“We will be repeating this schedule tomorrow.”
No opt-out button.
No resignation option.
Just continuity.
Conclusion
I do not manage my time.
I do not manage my energy.
Coffee does.
It:
- wakes me up
- assigns my confidence level
- determines my productivity
- and schedules my emotional stability in 3-hour intervals
My job is not working.
My job is simply keeping up with my manager.
And my manager?
Is always available.
Just one cup away.


