Tuesday 25 October 2011

Final Post!

And so this blog comes to an end… It’s been a long six weeks over which I have learnt many new ways to look at my activity! I have thoroughly enjoyed going out for coffee as much as I did and don’t think I’ll be cutting down on these outings anytime soon! In NZ we really are spoilt for choice when it comes to places to go out with friends for a good coffee! There are more coffee roasters per capita in NZ than anywhere else in the world! A NZ tourist website that I stumbled across explained how over the last couple of decades NZ has undergone a coffee revolution. This is because many Kiwis have become judges of the wonderful drink. This in turn has increased the standards and quality of coffee in NZ as well as the popularity. Many new cafes have popped up all over the country, so as I said before, we really are spoilt for choice for coffee destinations! Here’s the website if you want to have a bit more of a read:


This coffee culture that we have in our country has added to my experience of going out for coffee over the past six weeks and I think that it has made my experiences more exciting and easy to carry out! I would encourage you, if you have the funds, to grab some friends and make time to go on your own social coffee outings and explore the many cafes in Dunedin!

To finish off, here are the links to the other blogs that I have commented on:

And below are my 5 references and all the ones that aren't from our class material have been explained within the posts!

Caulton R., & Dickson R. (2007). Whats going on? Finding an explanation for what we do. In J. Creek & A. Lawson-Porter (Eds.), Contemporary Issues in Occupational Therapy (pp. 87-114). Chichester: John Wiley & Sons Ltd.

Caulton, R. F. (Ed). (2003). The best of occupation 1993-2003. Dunedin: Rogan McIndoe Print Ltd.
Friends Quotes. (2004). Retrieved October 18th 2011, from http://www.livesinabox.com/friends/quote.shtml
Lesly, K. (n.d.). Coffee, my old friend. Retrieved 12th October 2011, from http://cocoajava.com/java_poetry.html
Visser, M. (1992). The rituals of dinner. London: Viking, The Penguin Group
Also, if you’re a little confused about how my blog actually works and what posts belong to each week, here is a wee guide to prevent any confusion. The dates may be a little out of order however as I saved my postings in word and then posted them on here when they were completed. 

Week 1: Introduction to Social Coffee (incl. practical considerations)
Week 2: Story #1 + Ergonomics
Week 3: Story #2 + Affordances
Week 4: Story #3 + Affordance Continued
Week 5: Story #4 + Ambience
Week 6: Story #5 + The Need + This Final Post!

Thanks for reading, and goodbyeeeeee :)

Tuesday 18 October 2011

The Need!

Occupation is a necessary and very critical part of human life, without which I can’t imagine what life would be like, or if that’s even possible! Without occupation the lives of humans would simply be empty and without purpose.
Caulton and Dickson (2007) below talk about what it means for us as humans to be occupied.

“Being occupied is putting our minds to something and doing it. It is having something to do that contributes to the practical human world, to the exploration and discovery of things about the world we see, and/or to the imaginary world we construct" (p. 110).

Occupations can be divided into three categories (as we discussed in class this semester), these are; food/labour, craft/paper/work and plays. Going out for coffee falls under the category of food, obviously, as coffee is something that we consume. This week, the need for occupation was discussed in relation to the activities of my classmates and I under each of the above categories. The need for all of our activities differed quite considerably which highlighted to me that the need for occupation itself is very broad and a lot of the time the need is individual to the person carrying out the activity.

In saying this, i’m quite sure that the need for going out for coffee with others varies from person to person. The needs for going out for coffee differ slightly from those of food, however, even though the two fall under the same category. Although some people might like to argue this, we don’t need to drink coffee for survival like we need to consume food. Going out for coffee, like food, does however, bring people together and satisfy individual needs.

In my opinion there are three needs in particular that I think are most prominent. Firstly, it provides an opportunity for social interaction. It gives people the chance to build relationships with others, time to talk and a time to create new memories. Secondly, it gives people a chance to take time out. Going out for coffee can be a perfect opportunity to take a break from other stressors of life and to simply relax and enjoy ones self. And thirdly, the need is for the caffeine from the coffee itself. Coffee wakes you up, gives you a boost and can be especially helpful when you want to stay awake! These are only a few of the needs that I feel are important and I’m sure that going out for coffee is needed by other people in different ways.

In regards to myself, the need that going out for coffee meets most in my life is that of developing and sustaining social relationships. Going out for coffee presents me with the opportunity to give my undivided attention to an indiviual (or small group of individuals) where we can connect and purely spend time together over a drink. And, of course I love the coffee itself!

Below, Visser (1992) talks about how we humans have turned consuming food into a way of engaging in relationship with one another and creating community.

We turn the consumption of food, a biological necessity, into a carefully cultured phenomenon. We use eating as a medium for social relationships: satisfaction of the most individual of needs becomes the means of creating community” (p. ix).

This is what I feel I have done with my activity. I think that I have turned going out to drink coffee into a means of engaging in and building on social relationships. I used to just go out purely for the coffee itself but now I realise that this need has changed and that my activity has become much more than just consuming a drink!


References:
Caulton R., & Dickson R. (2007). Whats going on? Finding an explanation for what we do. In J. Creek & A. Lawson-Porter (Eds.), Contemporary Issues in Occupational Therapy (pp. 87-114). Chichester: John Wiley & Sons Ltd.
 Visser, M. (1992). The rituals of dinner. London: Viking, The Penguin Group

Monday 17 October 2011

Story #5

I always loved going out for coffee with Mum, whether it was to take a break from shopping, alongside a meal or just as a treat, I was up to going out for coffee with her any day! Today in particular, she had decided she was going to take me out for coffee after our morning walk. Our walks had become ritual when I was at home, but going out for coffee this morning was just a special treat! Every other day we had made machine coffees at home and although they always tasted good, there was nothing quite like going out for a ‘proper’ coffee.

So, after our walk we wandered down along the beach before heading into the township to our local café. It looked busy from the outside, but that didn’t stop us. Heading to order we bumped into my aunty and uncle, not suprising as most of my family lived in this little town! We stood by their table for a while and the conversation flowed easily. It was nice to see them and it just made me think about all the other people who have coffee rituals like my mum and I.

It was awfully hot inside the café, which prompted us to cut the conversations, order our coffees and head outside to find a table. It was nice not to have to pay for once, one of the things I loved about going out for coffee with mum. We settled ourselves in at a table overlooking the street and relaxed back to enjoy the morning.

The day was overcast, but not cold. Mum had told me that it was meant to reach 21 degrees but it didn’t look like it would at this stage! Nevertheless, it was nice that it wasn’t cold enough to have to sit inside. As we waited for our coffees we chatted away about our plans for the week ahead and what we were going to do that afternoon. It was so nice to just sit with mum and talk properly, I loved hanging out and it was so nice to be at home with her away from the many study stressors of Dunedin.

Our drinks arrived, and we downed them pretty quickly. Not because we were in a rush to leave, but because they tasted delightful just as I’d hoped they would. It’s funny, as I looked back I thought about how it was only a few short years ago that I used to hate the taste of coffee! Now, however, I would quite happily drink it all day! If only it didn’t keep me up all night…not that this is always a bad thing, especially round assignment times!

Once completely finished, we got up to leave, pushed our chairs in, yelled out a brief thank you and left. We promptly walked through the rest of the township, looking through the shops as we passed by and continued our walk all they way home. It was the perfect way to spend the morning and I hoped that we would go out for coffee again soon!

Monday 3 October 2011

Ambience

When we’re talking about ambience, we’re really talking about the essence of the activity. So, in my opinion the essence of going out for coffee is primarily to consume the coffee itself and secondary to come together socially with other people! As this activity falls under the category of food, it can be related to the essence of food also. The essence of food is really that its there to be eaten, we need it for survival, so we eat it and then replenish it again! Like food, going out for coffee can replenish us. It fills us up in a physical sense and also in an emotional sense. As we talked about in an earlier post, food, like coffee, can also be used to bring people together, to satisfy needs and create a sense of community. Ambience also refers to the atmosphere related to the activity. Throughout the past six weeks I have had coffee in many, many different cafes, each with their own unique atmosphere and environment. I think that it is the music, the interiors, the smells and the overall friendliness of the staff that make up the pleasing atmospheres associated with cafes. There’s just something about most café’s that make you feel good when you venture into them to enjoy a good coffee with friends! Lastly, I could argue that going out for coffee is essential for survival and I’m sure many people would happily agree with me. But I guess that it really is a matter of personal opinion, so I will leave you to make up your own mind about that one!

One of the readings that really stood out to me last year was Rosemary Caulton’s ‘The Taking of Tea’. I guess that this reading probably relates more to the affordances of my activity but I have only just been able to get a hold of it this week so I felt that it was appropriate to add in here after just having talked about the ‘essence’ of coffee! In this reading Caulton talks about the importance and meaning behind sharing a cup of tea. She illustrates how drinking tea together is so commonplace and prominent amongst our society and all about the satisfaction and comfort that it can bring. Just like tea, I believe that coffee brings about all the things that Caulton highlights in this reading. When it comes down to it, sharing a cup of coffee is just the same as sharing a cup of tea, only a different taste to the drink! To finish off I will leave you with a quote from the reading as I think that Caulton (2003) summed it up perfectly when she said:

 “…this cup, this loving, ordinary, commonplace, familiar cup affords both security and solace. Whether we like it, or drink it, or not, tea has become an archetypal image of humankind’s need-and ability-to provide itself in an instant, with warmth, order, meaning and comfort” (p.45).

Reference:

Caulton, R. F. (Ed). (2003). The best of occupation 1993-2003. Dunedin: Rogan McIndoe Print Ltd. 

Story #4

I knew that the long drive home from Dunedin to Christchurch was starting to take its toll as a wave of tiredness slowly began to sweep over me. My two passengers were fast asleep and we were barely an hour and a half into the journey! We had planned to stop for coffee in Timaru, but I quickly made the decision to shift this stop forward as I knew there was a café just ahead and I needed the caffeine fix! After passing the billboard signs for our coffee destination I quickly pulled off the motorway and swung into an empty slot in the car park. ‘Riverstone’ was a well-known café/restaurant and it was a place I’d stopped many times on journeys to and from Dunedin. Waking the others, we grabbed our wallets and headed in.

Once inside, it was instantly clear how popular this place was.  A line of people paying for their meals stretched back from the counter for what seemed like miles. Unwilling to keep driving another 40 minutes to find another less busy café, we joined the queue. Because of the time we knew it would take to actually reach the counter itself and order our coffees, we decided that takeaway was the best option.

As we slowly began to inch forward, very slowly I might add, we chatted away making up for the lost time in the car when they had been sleeping! When the counter itself finally came into view the conversation quickly changed to the array of cakes and sweet treats laid out on top. Why is it that you are always so tempted to buy something sweet to go alongside your coffee? I couldn’t resist, my mind was made up in a matter of minutes, carrot cake it was. Delish!

Finally, we reached the front of the line and were able to order our coffees and sweet goodies! Within minutes they were in our hot little hands. It seemed a bit ridiculous to have waited all that time when our food and drinks only took a few minutes to make. Nevertheless, I was happy as I slowly sipped away on my coffee. I loved drinking out of takeaway cups; there was just something about it that made the coffee taste better. Maybe I’m dreaming but that’s what I’ve always found!

With each sip I felt the tiredness drain from my body and instead I felt alert and full and ready to get back on the road. Coffee was definitely needed and I’m glad we had stopped when we did! Now I also had two wide-awake passengers, another bonus! We hit the road dinking our drinks and eating our treats and I think I can be safe in saying the coffee lead to the best car sing-a-long ever. As we drove on and sang away I found myself thinking that although we didn’t actually sit down at a table and drink our coffees this trip to the cafe was very much still a social coffee outing. We had chatted in line for a good 20 minutes, even talked to the staff brushing off their apologies for the wait and the coffee itself had lead to a very social next few hours the rest of the way home! In my eyes this pit stop was another very successful coffee outing!