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.
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