The market coffee and the pause before mediating
Wesley drinks his coffee mild. Always. Strong coffee overwhelms him the same way intense smells do — it's a threshold thing, not a preference. At the morning market in Ambalavao there's a stall that serves freshly brewed coffee before seven. Wesley buys one on his way to the mairie and carries it in his hand. He drinks it slowly, standing, in the courtyard of the municipal building, while he waits for the windows of the mediation room to have aired out enough.
That pause isn't in any protocol. Nobody writes it down. But it's what lets Wesley walk into the first meeting of the day with a clear head. Five minutes. Coffee in one hand. The other hand free. The sun starting to warm the east-facing facade. If someone talks to him, he answers. If nobody does, even better. The pause works better in silence, and Wesley knows it.
A ceramic mug is the object that best reproduces that moment. It isn't portable like a thermos or disposable like a paper cup. It's a desk object, a kitchen table object, an object for a deliberate pause. When you fill this mug with your morning coffee and hold it with both hands, you're repeating a gesture Wesley makes every day before he opens his folder and pulls out the first file.







