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The SIXTH Tea Room - Everyone Welcome

980 replies

Jacksmama · 21/03/2009 00:18

The One Child Tea Room started as a sort of sanctuary for anyone who was a bit tired of the controversy surrounding having one child only, for whatever reason. The topic seems to attract that sort of thing. So we thought we needed a place where a cup of tea and a muffin and a place to sit down and relax was needed - and judging by the number of visitors and regulars, it really was much needed!

The tea room has since undergone a few, shall we say, metamorphoses... it started as a charming bricks and mortar sort of place, with a lovely English garden, a ha-ha in the distance, and wonderful mismatched crockery.

But since the tea room is truly magical, at night, the glitter ball comes out, and booze and sofas canapees are served. During the daytime, there is a stable with (at last count) two horses, Earl and Lady Grey, who appreciate being exercised. We also have (at last count) two guinea pigs, RacingPig and RacingMissPiggy... but since they seem to have been up to no good, that count may increase shortly.

In its most recent incarnation, the tea room became a yurt, and we had Mellors The Gardener show up in buckskin trousers and no shirt (which caused several of the regulars to either fan themselves with whatever magazines were available, or faint prettily, preferably into Mellors' arms), and there seems to have been an errant bison or two.
Oh, and we also had the Naked Mohawk Babies - they were originally cake decorations (for the life of me, I cannot find the link right now) - and they have since taken on lives of their own, adding much amusement to the tea room.

Decorations include cut-outs of George Clooney, Wesley Snipes, and any other hunks of burning love we can think of. Oh, and peace lilies, and (since nothing seems to be able to kill the damn thing) an aspidistra.

For those who are shy of company, or fleeing controversial threads, we have a Priest Hole to hide relax in.

Please remember that the tea room is magical - no amount of Bolly swilled will cause a hangover, allergies of any type mean nothing, so you can eat and drink whatever you like, and if you don't fancy the distressed-looking couch, a brand-new comfy arm chair will appear in seconds.

EVERYONE is welcome, whether you have one child, none, or ten. In fact, one of our regulars is currently pregnant!!

The only strict rule we enforce is no fisticuffs. Anyone who behaves disagreeably will be ejected by Mellors (fully clad).

Most important of all - the tea room is meant for fun and support. It's perfectly acceptable, and in fact, mandatory, to be a little unhinged yourself.

Welcome all!!

(I've had a somewhat trying day so I will leave the crating and moving of china, and the actual shaping of the tea room, to everyone else... I did hear rumours of a spa being added, however, so please, book me in for a pedicure, will you? Thanks!)

OP posts:
Are your children’s vaccines up to date?
mistlethrush · 30/03/2009 17:07

My lavender is not doing anything yet - I know we're a bit different location wise, but even so... . When it was cut back, were the stems all dead or was there some semblance of life in them? You can sometimes tell by running your nail over the 'bark' of the stem of a shrub - if its still alive the skin should show a nice, clearly sap containing wood underneath. If its dead it will be obviously dead!

amber32002 · 30/03/2009 17:27

MT, it was a small matter of the parent allowing their daughter to invite no less than 20 friends to the house, and then taking herself off to bed without checking whether any of the little darlings were smuggling in gin/vodka/whatever else. They were. And they drank it. And the contents of her drinks cabinet. And one child had his juice spiked and was found face down in a sink of water by my ds. Another fell backwards down the stairs, luckily onto my ds who caught them. The neighbours were thoroughly alarmed, hence the police. Everyone was fine afterwards thank goodness. But that's what mid-teenage parties are like if parents are not paying attention (sigh).

Jacksmama, if you break off a bit and it's green inside, it's just waiting. If it's brown and dead, it's a gonner and needs replacing.

mistlethrush · 30/03/2009 17:38

Sounds as though your ds was the star of the party Amber - sounds a thoroughly reliable boy - you must both be very proud of him (at least most of the time!)

amber32002 · 30/03/2009 17:48

MT, ah well, that depends. He's very sensible in a crisis, yes. Given that he started off as a whirling dervish of a boy who would do nothing he was told and was a complete hazard to everyone and everything, quite a remarkable change . Luckily he discovered sport in a very major way, and I think it's helped a lot over the years. When he was in two rugby teams, two football teams and two tennis teams, I could happily have disowned him, though

mistlethrush · 30/03/2009 18:33

There's hope for ds then!!!!!!

I want to start him on some martial arts asap!

amber32002 · 30/03/2009 18:41

Oh we did that too. Came in handy for rugby, but they wanted him to do three evenings a week at competition level so we had to say no.

Jacksmama · 30/03/2009 18:42

Thanks all for the advice re the lavender. It looks like I won't need to replace it after all. I twisted one of the stems and it was nice and moist and green on the inside.
Thanks lovelies!
Now all I have to splurge on is a purple hydrangea. Joy!! I love the deeeeeeeep purple ones.

OP posts:
Jacksmama · 30/03/2009 18:44

Oh, and herbs. Must buy those. Basil, sage, thyme... but not yet, it's still to cold for them. Gosh, we're having a chilly spring. Normally the cherry trees along the avenue two streets away would have dropped their blossoms already. This year, nary a blossom in sight.

OP posts:
MadBadandDangerousToKnow · 30/03/2009 19:00

I've just come indoors from an active session in the garden with Mellors my secateurs.

Great news, jacksmama, about the survival of your lavender. I lost a lot of plants during the recent frosts - including some of the more tender herbs - but, to my amazement, the lavender survived. I lurve my gardener!

Mistle - I used to love NCT sales. MadBadBaby had some very classy labels when she was a baby, thanks to them. (Mind you, it's backfired on me now as she is very fussy about what she wears, in rather a tiresome way.)

Amber - The Fine Lad is even finer than we knew! You've obviously done a great job of parenting your only. Interesting about the sport - my nephew at the age of 8 is already expected to do two karate lessons a week, so presumably it will become even more demanding if he carries on with it.

So, we seem to have a few bottles of Rose d'Anjou left over from last night. Would anyone like a glass?

amber32002 · 30/03/2009 19:07

Yes please for a glass (or two) since it's virtual and contains No Calories Whatsoever

MadBad, I won't take full credit for fine lad (though he is, bless him). He was lucky enough to go through a very, very lovely mixed intake primary school which taught him a lot about life and 'grounded him' for a lot of experiences. Plus he's had to cope with a mum and dad who have a variety of challenges of their own, and so has had to learn to reason and explain and help a bit and be a bit patient, in return for which he's had plenty of chances of fun and friendship and sport and travel in life. I have to giggle at his role as 'unofficial school counsellor' in his year group. There he is, minding his own business, and invariably someone will slope up to him and tap him on the shoulder and ask if he can spare a few minutes to listen to their (whatever it is that's troubling them) and see if he has an opinion. He should charge! . He's becoming very interested in psychology...

Catitainahatita · 30/03/2009 19:15

Yes, please to whatever virtual alcohol is going please.
I'm having a crappy day. for a change, plus exhausted and a headache. Had to go to a student's viva (my own student who I have mollycoddled through three years of thesis writing); felt like absolute crap all the way through, couldn't concentrate nor say anything vaguely sensible.
Came out, got in the car and drove into the wall face on. I have no idea how I managed it. My bumper is hanging on my a thread. I feel like weeping, but have a pile of crappy first year essays to mark.

Winge over.

amber32002 · 30/03/2009 19:23

Goodness me, Catita - you need a very large virtual alcohol, I think, and a nice foot massage from Mellors...who will probably magically repair your car for you whilst you wait, too.

I have to read through a load of CVs for tomorrow's interviews, so I guess I need to remove myself from mn and get on with it (sigh).

Jacksmama · 30/03/2009 19:23

What else do you need lovely?

OP posts:
MadBadandDangerousToKnow · 30/03/2009 19:34

Oh dear, Catita.

I managed to have a car accident last week and still feel bleurgh about it. Were you hurt? What are the essays about? You could give us the gist and we could mark them for you.

Amber - All the food and drink in the tea room is calorie-free and yet, at the same time, wholesome, nutritious and sustaining.

How interested in psychology is the Fine Lad? Are we talking degree-type interest?

Catitainahatita · 30/03/2009 19:34

Thanks JM. The rye and ginger is also nice and tangy.

Your DS sounds like a real star Amber. I'm sure that you and Mr. Amber's genes plus upbringing have something to do with him being that way.

mistlethrush · 30/03/2009 19:36

Is this a spare glass - and is that some rose at the bottom of that bottle? I'll join you.

Dh is meant to be being in charge of ds when I bring him home from school - so I can do some more work. Today they did lego models with the lego that I bought at the NCT sale ()

However, this meant that dh didn't get the oven on early enough - which means that ds didn't start to eat his supper until 6 - then rather than actually helping very tired, not quite 4yo to get some supper into him when he was really to tired to dih, he just reminded him regularly - which meant that I (designated to be on bath duty by ds) had to feed him most of the remnants while he sat on the toilet (as he'd already taken so long getting that far. That, of course, delayed the bath, then he was so tired that he played up which delayed bedtime etc.

Please remind me to go to bed early this evening!

Catitainahatita · 30/03/2009 19:50

I am unruffled physically by the whole thing, it was hardly a big accident; just me, the car and the wall. The wall and the car are not in good shape however. I'm just cross at myself for being such an idiot.

My essays are about the possible uses and abuses of history in the creation of patriotism. A controversial topic over here seeing as many national (and untrue) myths still dominate civic festivals and school celebrations. My students tend to get upset either at me (for bringing it to their attention) or at their ex schools (for getting them to believe it in the first place). Some will blame the government, some will blame me. It's a laugh a minute.

mistlethrush · 30/03/2009 19:55

Catita - the main thing is that you're OK. The car is just something to get around in - and it sounds as though its fixable. Blame it on your condition, don't worry yourself overit more.

MadBadandDangerousToKnow · 30/03/2009 19:59

Eek! I withdraw my offer to remote-mark the essays.

I'm glad you're ok, Catita. I didn't refresh the screen before I posted, so I hadn't realised that you were being simultaneously massaged by Jacksmama (feet) and me (shoulders). But I have just seen Mellors striding purposefully towards the wall - this being the tea room, I can see it and Mellors can reach it within moments, distance and time zones being as nothing to him - carrying a bucket of mortar, so I'm sure it'll soon be fixed. And as he's licensed to drive a ride-on lawnmower I'm sure he can fix the car too .

Catitainahatita · 30/03/2009 20:23

Yep the car is eminently fixable and the owners of the wall (the uni) are not about to sue me, so things aren't that bad. I just could have done without it, really.

My essay pile is diminishing. Hurray.

MT: go to bed early!

mistlethrush · 30/03/2009 20:42

We had one tutor at uni (the first one ) who we had to try to hand our essays in in the middle of the pile (we handed them to the secretary, she put them in his pigeon hole in the order that she got them). The middle of the pile was essential - to near the top (ie handed in later) and he wasn't far enough down the (single malt whiskey) bottle to be in a good mood. Too far down and you couldn't read his comments even though they were type written. In the middle of the pile he was just about mellow enough to look at work in a positive fashion, but you could still read the comments!!!

teafortwo · 30/03/2009 20:42

Oh dear about the car Catita - reminds me of the day I put diesel in my petrol car......

HURRAY for your diminishing essay pile - waaaahhhhhoooo!!!!!!!!!!

CMOTdibbler · 30/03/2009 22:50

Hugs for the car Catita.

You obv have a really lovely DS Amber.

Am in Haan (Germany) right now. Colleague has filled me in on all her wedding plans, and I have volunteered to make a cupcake tower So far, so good

Am very glad that I did a degree with no essay writing at all. And indeed, where getting your work marked at all was a bit of a lottery..

thumbbunny · 30/03/2009 22:55

I am late - I expect you've mostly gone to bed - but wanted to add in my sympathies to Catita - what a rotten day! If it's any comfort to you, I managed to dent both our cars while pg, both on the rear offside doors, due to loss of spatial awareness when going around things. They both still have the dents .

Amber - your Ds is sounding more like Superson than ever - must be starting to make up for the early challenges he presented you with!

Parties - I did do one for DS for his 1st b'day, because it would be his last one in the UK for I don't know how long, and my sis would have had a fit. So it was just family - sis &BIL and their 3DDs (aged 2.5, 3.75 & 5), Dad, my non-bio twin (born on the same day) and her DS who was just 5, plus a lovely friend of ours who is just setting up as a children's entertainer - she brought musical stuff and puppets and balloons to make balloon animals etc. She was great! DS mostly just watched and ran around after the other DC but had a great time!
And our party bags were fairly traditional - a tiny pot of bubbles, a silly little toy, a little cake and some toy sunglasses. None of this competitive Party Bag nonsense that I have read about in some books!

I think I'll have another Rose spritzer - yesterday's went down rather nicely...

Really must go and do some work....

thumbbunny · 30/03/2009 22:58

X-post with CMOTD - have you seen Comeoveneer's cakes/cupcake towery things on her profile? Are you a fabiosa cakeista as well? Am impressed! Last cake I made was DS's christening cake and I forgot to add the baking powder - it was midnight and it was a marble cake so couldn't go back and rectify error . Generally I'm quite good though...

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