Teabagged
Really, it's just a picture of teabags. Not of me teabagging you (which, for those who don't know, can be a common occurrence in multiplayer videogames these days -- you get shot in the face, and then your foe comes and squats up and down on said face while you lay supine, waiting to respawn; hence, the enemy is virtually teabagging you).
This is a Tazo ginger green tea.
For those who don't know, green tea actually has a stomach-upsetting side effect. For the longest time, I thought I was allergic. I'd drink green tea, and my guts would get all woozy. Then my head would follow. I'd feel queasy for a half-hour, maybe an hour, then it'd go away. And I'd stare ruefully at the green tea, and I eventually gave up drinking it.
Except, duh. I found out this is not at all an uncommon side effect. In fact, drinking green tea on an upset stomach might have you yarfing (that's a technical, medical term, "yarfing") in record time. Some people say it's the caffiene, which doesn't seem right because coffee doesn't necessarily make people sick on an empty stomach -- so, I'm going to go ahead and guess that it's the polyphenols that are doing it.
You can either drink green tea after having some food, or, if that's not possible, have a variety that includes mint or ginger -- both of these will help to settle the stomach, ideally preventing the Yarf Syndrome (sometimes known in medical circles as "The Technicolor Yawn").
Otherwise, green tea's generally pretty good for you. Its caffiene metabolizes differently from coffee, so you don't get as jacked up. It helps inhibit cancer growth. It gives you superpowers, allows you to punch cars into the atmosphere. It improves sexy-time performance. It allows you to see into the future. It lets you do 10 minutes of error-free trigonometry. It gets you drunk. It gets you crunk. It punches dragons. Green tea is great stuff.
Teabagged
Really, it's just a picture of teabags. Not of me teabagging you (which, for those who don't know, can be a common occurrence in multiplayer videogames these days -- you get shot in the face, and then your foe comes and squats up and down on said face while you lay supine, waiting to respawn; hence, the enemy is virtually teabagging you).
This is a Tazo ginger green tea.
For those who don't know, green tea actually has a stomach-upsetting side effect. For the longest time, I thought I was allergic. I'd drink green tea, and my guts would get all woozy. Then my head would follow. I'd feel queasy for a half-hour, maybe an hour, then it'd go away. And I'd stare ruefully at the green tea, and I eventually gave up drinking it.
Except, duh. I found out this is not at all an uncommon side effect. In fact, drinking green tea on an upset stomach might have you yarfing (that's a technical, medical term, "yarfing") in record time. Some people say it's the caffiene, which doesn't seem right because coffee doesn't necessarily make people sick on an empty stomach -- so, I'm going to go ahead and guess that it's the polyphenols that are doing it.
You can either drink green tea after having some food, or, if that's not possible, have a variety that includes mint or ginger -- both of these will help to settle the stomach, ideally preventing the Yarf Syndrome (sometimes known in medical circles as "The Technicolor Yawn").
Otherwise, green tea's generally pretty good for you. Its caffiene metabolizes differently from coffee, so you don't get as jacked up. It helps inhibit cancer growth. It gives you superpowers, allows you to punch cars into the atmosphere. It improves sexy-time performance. It allows you to see into the future. It lets you do 10 minutes of error-free trigonometry. It gets you drunk. It gets you crunk. It punches dragons. Green tea is great stuff.