Lula's

Lula's was a little coffee shop on the eastern edge of Notre Dame's campus in South Bend, IN. It was an eclectic place. It was a college town coffee shop. It looked like a college artist's dorm room. . . walls painted odd colors with things like Asian room screens spread about the place for spots of privacy. There were older, dingy chairs and couches that looked like they had endured world wars, yet still had lots of life left in them. There were also many tables and chairs, since it was a college town coffee shop.

The best thing about Lula's was THE TABLE. Now, for you to get the idea of THE TABLE, we must go into reminiscing mode for a moment. . .

In my life, there are two or three tables that have left lasting impressions on my life. One of those tables was my grandmother's table. It was massive. It had thick, sturdy legs with bent arches between them. It also had a stout center rail that ran from one side to the other. I don't remember what wood it was made of, though it had a dark red feel. I think it was redwood or something like that. Interestingly, it wasn't your average farmhouse table, which is what you would expect from my grandmother's house--an old 100 year old farmhouse back a mile lane with grand maple trees surrounding it for shade.

Another table from my past was my neighbor's table. When I was 10 or so, an Amish family bought the land across from where I lived and built a house. They were Amish in heritage, though they used vehicles, electricity, and so on. Their table was long and sturdy. It was thick and stout. You could have driven a car onto it and it wouldn't have even flinched. It had bench seats, with two captain's chairs at the end. And, the times that I had dinner there with the Yoder's, it was a family affair where life was talked about and family happened.

The same could be said for the table at my parents house. My parents have an oak table that was made by my great grandfather. Its old. Its weathered and worn. It doesn't fully sit straight with all the leaves in it. But it has history. Much conversation and life has happened around that table. Many hours of cards, food, games, and life.

Those are the things I think about when I think of the table at Lula's It was heavy and stout, like a table you might find in an ancient castle. It was big enough to seat 6 or 8, and it almost always had a group of people around it. I had many great conversations around with friends.

The coffee at Lulas was very good. I don't know the pedigree of their beans, but they always seemed to be from quality places like Latin America and Africa.

Sadly, Lula's closed a few years ago. The owner of the building did not renew their lease. Somewhere in someone's garage sit's Lula's table, dormant from use. May it one day return to its glory as a place of conversation and great coffee!

Hill of Beans

Hill of Beans was my first experience to a coffee shop. It was back in the day when I was a baby in the coffee world. I hadn't before that really had any snooty coffee other than what restaurants or my parents served up. I may have also had a 4 cup Mr. Coffee.

Luckily for me, I believe that Hill of Beans was the best of the coffee shops that I have ever been too. It was a small store front tucked into the side of strip mall near Great Lakes Christian College. It had a small bar where 3 or 4 people could pull up to and converse with the barista of the day. The rest of the shop was long and narrow. there was enough room down one side of the shop to put furniture. If my memory serves me correctly, there were only maybe two or three tables. Everything else was groupings of wicker chairs and love seats where you could sit and chat the day away. It also boasted an outdoor seating area, when the Michigan weather would allow.

The coffee from what I remember was spectacular. Since it was my virgin experience in drinking something more than regular, run of the mill coffee, I always opted for the mocha. And, too this day, their mocha is what everything else is measured up against. In all honesty, I don't even remember having anything other than the mocha there. I was such a rookie. . .

The best thing about Hill of Beans was the ambiance. I skipped many classes at GLCC for a tall mocha and great conversation with friends, especially the guys from Testify, the worship band I was in in the 90s.

Unfortunately, Hill of Beans closed sometime after I left for seminary in Tennessee. I wish it were still there so I could return and try all the other great things I'm sure they had.

Coffee Shops

Coffee Shops are the most interesting places in my opinion. I think that is why I enjoy hanging out in them. You can see just about any type of person walk through the door. Sometimes they are simply in for a quick fix of caffeine. They are in and out in a flash.

Other times they are here to have a conversation of some importance. A few months ago it was a conversation between business partners trying to transition their concert venues and so on here in Lansing. Today it was a professor and his student processing the future work they were going to venture in on through the summer.

Clientele is not limited to a specific age group. In the place I am at today, Grand River Coffee, there are young and old scattered among the chairs, tables, and couches. To my right there is a guy who looks to be in his 30s going through a green plastic bin of accumulated mail. All the while, over my shoulder to the left there is an old guy passed out with his laptop on knees. He's been that way for about an hour. (I think someone should check on him to make sure he is still breathing.)

The coffee shop isn't a place that judges. it is here for anyone to use, whether you need to refuel, rest, or get some work done. If you need to have a conversation, that is welcome also. It is a Third Place.

That is the draw. For me, I'm looking for a place that has good coffee and isn't my office. Great internet signal is also a bonus, but not really necessary and probably better for my productivity plan. Free parking is also a bonus. I'm looking for that place that is a home away from home so to speak.

I think that is the reason I have had a strong pull to open up a coffee shop at some point in my life. I want to create the place that I love...a place where you can come and find what you need and get great coffee. That is a must.

Now if I only had an endless amount of money to do this....