There’s something about walking into a coffee shop that feels like stepping sideways out of time.
Maybe it’s the quiet hum of conversation, or the way the scent of freshly ground beans hits you just before the door swings shut. Maybe it’s the chipped mugs behind the bar or the fact that the barista remembers your name — and maybe even your story.
I’ve spent a lot of my life in coffee shops. I worked in them through my teens and early twenties — chain spots, local joints, third-wave dreams. I still stop into one almost every day, even if it’s just for a quick hello and a warm cup. But it’s never really just about the coffee.
Coffee shops were where I grew up — not from a kid into an adult exactly, but from someone going through the motions into someone more aware. Of people. Of ideas. Of myself.
There’s something quietly transformative about being behind the counter — learning to make drinks, yes, but also learning to listen. Learning to ask better questions. I remember those early evenings, the shop glowing softly in warm light as I practiced on the espresso machine. Everything slowed down. I’d sip on my own coffee and dig into the why of the process. The smell of fresh grounds, the hiss of steam — it felt sacred. I can’t reproduce that feeling to this day.
And over time, something subtle and profound happened: the shop became more than a workplace. It became a portal. A place where life cracked open.
I was raised in deeply conservative communities, where the world was small, the rules were clear, and being “different” often meant being feared, or worse, erased. It wasn’t cruelty, exactly — just a kind of handed-down certainty. A worldview that didn’t leave a lot of room for complexity, or curiosity, or deviation from the script.
But in coffee shops, I met people who shattered those scripts.
One of my coworkers, Travis, came in one morning still shaken — his father had screamed hateful things at him that day for being gay, for being different. He bawled before his shift, spent the day trying to keep himself together behind the bar. That moment burned into me. It was so raw, so human. And it revealed something I hadn’t let myself believe before: that the people I was taught to fear were just… people. Hurting, striving, beautiful people.
And then there was Hannah — vibrant, honest, unapologetically herself in every way. She didn’t wear a mask. She didn’t flinch when she talked about hard things. Her self-reflection and groundedness made me feel like I was living behind glass — like maybe I was a little scared to be known. She helped change that.
These weren’t sermons. They were conversations over clinking mugs and shared shifts. And they shaped me more than years of schooling ever did.
I even met my wife through coffee shop conversations. And I’ve made real friendships — people like Taylor, who remembered small details and always made time to ask how I actually was. I’ve had customers I thought I’d only speak to once come back weeks later and re-engage like we’d known each other forever. I’ve even been offered jobs, just sitting and talking at cafĂ© tables.
Coffee shops hold space like that. They’re not home, and they’re not work, but they’re still ours. These third places are the quiet, public corners of the world where you can belong without needing to perform — where you can show up with a laptop, or a book, or just a heavy heart. And no one asks you to be anything but present.
That kind of space — where you’re allowed to be instead of do — it’s rare. And so, so needed.
Because third spaces don’t just give us rest. They give us the chance to grow. To change. To hear something unexpected, meet someone new, or glimpse a version of ourselves we didn’t know we were allowed to be.
It might sound lofty, but it’s true.
I think often of cafĂ©s in 18th-century France — how they became spaces for writers, philosophers, musicians to gather. Not because of some grand plan, but because the coffee shop was the place that welcomed them. Public houses full of voices. I’m no Robespierre (thank God), but I have had those conversations. The ones that reframe your understanding of the world — or of yourself. That spirit still lives on in good cafĂ©s today.
Some of the most meaningful conversations I’ve ever had happened over mugs of coffee. Some of the most surprising friendships. Some of the quietest healing.
There’s a kind of magic in that space. And that’s the kind of magic I dream of creating one day.
I still hold onto a silly little poem I wrote once, sitting in a shop during the quiet early hours. It starts like this:
"deep within the murky depths / of caffeine induced epitaphs…
cups clink and orders spoke / an entire world not yet awoke…
grab a seat / grab a cup / take a sip / grab another cup."
One day — maybe when the timing is right — I’d love to open my own place. A space called Whitecap Coffee. A place with chipped mugs and soft light. Where people feel safe, and seen, and maybe even transformed. A place where the coffee is good, but the possibility is better.
Because the world could always use one more coffee shop —
especially the kind that reminds you who you are.
Until next time,
Stay warm and toasty.