Monday, June 29, 2026

Sip Hole

 Coffee cup "sip hole" alignment


After several thousand cups of coffee in cardboard “to go” cups, I’ve learned one important thing: never let the sip opening in the plastic lid line up with the seam of the cup itself.

If they align, there’s a decent chance you’ll get the slowest leak imaginable. Not enough to notice immediately. Just a tiny stealth drip.

I learned this the hard way years ago and now check every lid automatically. Locate seam. Rotate lid. Sip. This is my process now.

Turns out I’m not alone. I recently noticed Panera is printing the words “sip hole” near the rim of their cups to help customers position the lid properly and avoid drips.

But “sip hole”? That’s the phrase a room full of adults approved?

It sounds less like coffee guidance and more like a minor plumbing issue. Or a medical condition. Or an argumentative outburst: “Shut your sip hole, pal.”

Still, I admire the effort. In a world where most corporate language exists to manipulate, distract, or sound “engaging,” here is a tiny piece of copy trying to solve an actual human problem: don’t wear the coffee. Saying, essentially: “Turn the lid slightly or you’ll baptize your sweater in Colombian roast.”

I wonder what other suggestions the creative team suggested before “sip hole” was chosen … maybe “Drink here -- opposite seam.” This might not have been as clever. But neither is arriving at work looking like your latte sneezed on you.

Anyway, once you’ve experience the drip of this coffee delivery system design flaw, you’ll never forget to check for proper alignment.

And maybe that’s adulthood in general: discovering that most systems work just well enough to keep moving, while ordinary people quietly invent survival techniques nobody officially teaches.

Mine just happens to involve rotating a coffee lid 180-degrees clockwise.



Friday, June 26, 2026

The Rules

 Rules

People like rules because they promise clarity. Do this, avoid that, and everything works out. It’s the same logic behind every “best practice” list.

I prefer not to think of rules as narrow and rigid. I consider them flexible guidelines. Guidelines assume you can think. They bend. They expect context. They’re less law, more “this usually works—until it doesn’t.”

Don’t get me wrong. I’m not anti-rule. Rules are useful and have been developed and tested over time, but they're built for conformity and comfort. They’re the box that gurus tell you to think outside of.

I like a good structure. And I like knowing where the edges are. But I don’t pretend those edges are fixed. Context shifts. People change. Technology rearranges the furniture while we’re still in the room.

So know the rules, but also know when to bend ‘em and when to break ‘em. Think of altering and ignoring rules as adjustment as opposed to a rebellion.



Thursday, June 25, 2026

A hook isn’t a party trick

 

Marketing Hooks

If you tease and bail, you’re not clever. You’re forgettable.

A hook isn’t a party trick. It’s a promise. And when you break it, you train your reader to stop trusting you.

Great copy does three things:

  1. It earns attention
  2. It rewards attention
  3. It directs attention somewhere useful

Hook ‘em. Pay ‘em off. Then give them a clear next move.

Because the goal isn’t to leave people impressed by your setup.

It’s to leave them glad they stuck around and compelled to act.



Wednesday, June 24, 2026

AI Knows the Code. We Know the Story

 

Spectrum of Visible Light


A machine can parse “red” down to numerical terms: hex codes and RGB values. To AI, the word is nothing more than coordinates on a chart. Efficient. Accurate. Sterile.

But when we say “red,” we’re not speaking math.

We’re summoning brake lights glowing in the fog.

We’re tasting strawberries stolen from a neighbor’s garden.

We’re remembering that sweater someone wore the first night we fell in love.

In other words, we’re not just naming a color. We’re tapping into a web of memory, story, and sensation. Words carry with them the fingerprints of lived experience.

And this is where machines stumble. They’re excellent at patterns … finding them, repeating them, remixing them until the rhythm sounds right. But sounding right and feeling right are two different things.

Humans notice the gap. Not consciously, not always with language for it, but we sense it. We read a piece of text and something just isn’t there. The pulse is missing. The connective tissue of actual life hasn’t soaked through the words.

That’s why study after study shows humans outperform AI detectors when it comes to sniffing out machine-made text. We aren’t just scanning for form. We’re searching for connection. And when it’s absent, the silence is deafening.

Because words don’t live in a dataset. They live in us. They carry the weight of moments machines will never taste, touch, or remember.

And that weight makes all the difference.



Sip Hole

  After several thousand cups of coffee in cardboard “to go” cups, I’ve learned one important thing: never let the sip opening in the plasti...