W…ritten by
jaron summers © 2026
Every morning, before the sun rises over Los Angeles and before the swines at LADWP begin sharpening their pencils, I perform an act of fiscal courage.
I make coffee at home.
Now to the untrained eye, this looks like laziness. It appears I am simply shuffling to the kitchen in slippers, pouring filtered water into a humble machine, and pressing a button.
But this is not convenience.
This is sacrifice.
Let us review the numbers
Let us review the numbers, because numbers do not lie — though they occasionally smirk.
A 12-ounce latte at Starbucks in Los Angeles costs about $5.50. This is before oat milk surcharges, before tax, before the subtle pressure to tip, and before the emotional cost of standing behind someone ordering a venti half-caff quadruple-shot caramel cloud situation.
If I purchased just one latte per day:
$5.50 × 365 days = $2,007.50 per year.
Two lattes per day?
$4,015 per year.
Three per day?
$6,022.50.
Six thousand dollars.
That is not coffee. That is a minor European vacation. That is a used Volvo. That is gold bullion in discreet tubes.
Now compare this to my monk-like domestic discipline
At home, my 12-ounce cup costs:
- 20 cents in coffee beans
- About 1 penny in electricity
- Approximately 0.84 cents wasted because I often leave a cup sitting there contemplating existence
Even if we round generously, my cost per cup is about 22 cents.
If I drink three cups per day, my annual cost is roughly $292.
Not $6,000.
Two hundred ninety-two dollars.
That means — and I say this quietly — that I am personally foregoing approximately $5,700 per year in potential latte consumption.
I am, in essence, denying myself the right to be photographed holding a paper cup with my name misspelled.
What I am sacrificing
I am sacrificing:
- Steamed milk artistry
- Ambient indie music
- The opportunity to nod gravely at strangers while typing nothing into a laptop
- The prestige of saying, “I’ll grab it at Starbucks.”
Instead, I stand alone in the kitchen, heating water from 60 degrees to 212 degrees like a Victorian engineer.
I do this not for myself.
I do it for Kate ….
Because every penny I save by not buying lattes is a penny that can:
- Sit in an index fund
- Buy actual gold
- Pay condo dues
- Or cover the shocking annual cost of my multivitamin (a reckless 12 cents per day)
A moment for the multivitamin
Let us pause on that vitamin.
My vitamin costs more annually than the electricity to heat my coffee water.
Do you see what I endure?
The punchline (and the math)
At Starbucks, I could be spending:
$4,000 per year on two daily lattes
Instead, I am heroically spending:
Roughly $300 per year
The difference — approximately $3,700 — is what financial planners refer to as “the latte factor.”
I call it “marital devotion.”
If invested modestly at 5% annually, those savings over 20 years could grow to well over $120,000.
One hundred twenty thousand dollars.
That is not coffee.
That is inheritance.
In conclusion
So when I pour that second cup — the one I have gently convinced Kate is “too strong for a female tummy” — please understand:
This is not stinginess.
This is statesmanship.
This is leadership.
This is a man standing firm against the frothy tyranny of retail caffeine.
I am not merely brewing coffee.
I am protecting our financial sovereignty.
And yes, I will have another cup.
Because every sip tastes like compound interest.
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