I don’t know where it began, but Diet Coke and I became
quite an item in the last few years. It started out as something occasional. A
beverage to supplement a meal or something to quench mid-afternoon thirst. But
what began as a casual relationship, soon turned into something much more
serious.
But first off, let’s get things straight. I’m not talking
about just any Diet Coke, I fell in love with Diet Coke in a can. Not from a
can poured into a glass, but Diet Coke straight-up, chilled, IN a can. A little bit of
internet “research” told me that apparently the sweeteners are a little
different in bottled, can, and fountain. Whether that’s true or not didn’t
really matter to me. Neither did the looming horror of the anti-aspartame
activists around me that took every chance they could, to explain to me how my
attraction to DC was worse than Ebola.
There’s something about the sound of a cold can being
opened. It’s like you can hear its chill, feel its flavor, and touch its bubbly
texture. And there was something of comfort in that sound. Like a cozy scarf on
a cool autumn day, the hot summer sun melting your skin, or a fluffy pillow to
lay your head on after a long busy day, DC felt good. REALLY good. The first
sip was always the best, just like a fine glass of red wine. The flavor lingered awhile
as a velvet blanket of “ahhhhhhhhh” permeated every cell in my body. This was my everyday, this was The Good Life.
So naturally, we took things to the next level, and that next level came at
8:00am. While everyone else was chugging back their fourth five-dollar-coffee
of the morning, I felt like I was winning the game of caffeine dependency when I’d
crack a cold one to start to my day. “Sure, your 500 calorie latte is “healthier”,
I mean sugar isn’t really all that bad anyway is it? And there’s something to
say for the benefits of full fat dairy, so add a couple extra creamers-- it’s
good for you.” MY sunrise bevvie clocks in at ZERO calories, and a measly 50
cents. BAM.
Spring turned to summer, summer to winter; a few times over,
and DC and I were still going strong. DC had replaced my craving for unnecessary
snacks, it was a fix to calm stressed out nerves, and I was feeling pretty good
about it. Until I realized that not only had it been replacing things in a
seemingly good way, I also was drinking next to no water. I once actually
considered bringing DC to the gym with me if it weren’t for transparent water
bottles. So, I started to entertain the idea of what life would be like on my
own. Could I get past wanting to devour a box of m&m’s at 2pm every day? What
would accompany my lunch? What would I do at 8:00am? Who would be there for me? And as
unreasonable as I thought it sounded, I was up for a challenge.
So, DC and I broke up. Wonder what happened next? Nothing. Absolutely
nothing. Now, I’ve read many a story on people who quit DC and have experienced
some life-changing-euphoric-lightbulb-type-moment, people who feel that their bodies
have been cleansed from all evils of the chemicals gods, and that suddenly have a new
lease on life, re-incarnated as their favorite childhood super hero. Not in my case. Turns
out that it’s not that hard to come to work at 8:00am and just drink water.
Turns out that drinking water with lunch works just about the same. Turns out,
that when I thought I NEEDED DC to get me through the last half of the day, an extremely
long and boring conference call, or to actually do what it was intended to do---quench
thirst, not having it around didn’t
change anything. And it blew my mind. There was my lightbulb moment.
Going solo actually wasn’t all that hard. I thought about DC
from time to time, and to be honest I wanted to go back on occasion, but for
what? Am I convinced that aspartame is worse than Ebola? No. Do I think
aspartame is good for me? Also no. So what’s the point?
And while I still miss the “ahhhhhhh” and comfort that comes
from breaking into a clammy aluminum can of brown liquid, life goes on without
DC. And it turns out this new-and-improved version of The Good Life ‘aint half bad.
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