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Just to wobble away from the main thread a little, too danged hot is why I switched from lip blistering metal coffee cups to ugly plastic travel mugs.
I feel less authentic but so much more comfortable at 7 am. Feeling authentic at 7 am is generally not a problem.
I have never understood the allure of a metal coffee cup. David Brower’s decade’s long use of his “iconic” Sierra Cup left me wondering “why”?
https://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=1113620
Even in the 60’s I had discovered ways to not burn my lip on a scalding metal cup, or have the coffee go cold before I got to it. After using a variety of plastic cups and insulated mugs I settled on an old insulated Bodum cup, originally meant to be paired with a coffee drip-cone (still have the cone, still works fine with coffee grounds).
That was 20 years ago, and I know there are fancier and better insulated Yeti mugs and the like, but I still prefer that ancient Bodum 2-cup semi-insulated tumbler. Nothing else feels as familiarly comforting in hand, or on sip, as that old friend Bodum.

OK, I expect there is a bit of Brower-ish coffee cup and ritual in all of us.
Current morning ritual; stagger over to the blue barrel, pull out the “Breakfast” and “Stove” bags, boil 2 cups of water in the Jetboil, pour it in the Bodum mug, dump in two packets of Starbucks via (or one packet of Via and one of instant Folgers if I am feeling cheap), sip slowly while I wander aimlessly about camp while waking up and thinking about what I want for breakfast.
Make a second cup after breakfast to intermittently sip while breaking cap, and bring whatever’s left in the Bodum in the canoe with me.
I guess that would work with tea as well, but I always get a cramp in my extended pinkie finger when sipping tea.