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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 · 01/04/2009 09:24

I'll have a cup. That's the advantage of having a dog who, although she tries hard, has failed miserably to catch anything at all in her life, even being pushed out of the way, aged 3 by my parents' smaller then 13.5yo collie/terrier cross who then caught the rabbit and gummed it to death

There's a nice mix of people in the tearoom isn't there!

CMOTdibbler · 01/04/2009 09:30

These cats are the most hunting of all the ones we've had - although we now live in the most green area that we have, and they get to come and go. Apparently cat2 has been teasing a Staffie from round the corner, and actually jumped on it's back yesterday.

There is a great mix here - generally it's one of the great things about MN that you get to meet such a range of people

mistlethrush · 01/04/2009 09:33

A friend of ours had a cat who used to stalk cows. And a neighbour of theirs got some young peacocks (which made an awful noise) but seemed to be getting picked off by the foxes - or that's what they thought until they saw their cat going past their kitchen window at 5' attached to one of the few remaining peacocks. They had wondered why he wasn't eating very much....

thumbbunny · 01/04/2009 11:41

pmsl at the cat who thought he was a lion, MT! Ideas above his station (and size)!

Anyone care to join me in a luscoius hot chocolate with toasted hot cross buns?

MadBadandDangerousToKnow · 01/04/2009 11:50

Morning all!

I always welcome Amber's explanations of life as an aspie, too. I think I have some mild aspie-ish traits - although they're also OCD-ish - in things like counting carpet tiles or noticing if there's an imperfection in the pattern in which they're laid. When I was a child, I used to pass the time on car journeys by rearranging sentences so that they contained letters in multiples of 10. Indeed I did!

For admission to university, we had to do a day of psychometric and intelligence tests, including the famous one (whose name I forget) where you have pictures of what look like two shapes made of lego blocks at different rotations and you have to say whether the shapes are the same or different. I got in, so presumably my spatial awareness is OK!

I am a terrible worrier/faffer-about when it comes to holiday packing, but have come to the view that as long as I take the essentials - passports, prescription medicines - anything else can be bought there.

And I continue to be amazed by the tea room! When it opened, I thought it was a temporary shelter from the storm and yet here we are, in our sixth incarnation with a growing cast of gardeners, naked mohawk babies, bishops, an escaped prison inmate and other lovely people.

So shall we have a celebratory cup of tea?

CMOTdibbler · 01/04/2009 11:55

Tea or hot chocolate. Hmmm - dilemma... Hot choc please to sustain me through a very, very boring job. Am rewarding myself with one MN to each item on the list as it has to be done today (else we will miss our software release date), but no one likes doing as the software that is used for tracking bugs is so awful

MadBadandDangerousToKnow · 01/04/2009 11:56

Ooops. Am slow poster and hadn't seen Thumbbunny's suggestion of hot chocolate and hot cross buns. That sounds much more appealing than a cup of tea, so yes please!

mistlethrush · 01/04/2009 11:56

Yes please Madbad, I rarely say no to a cuppa.

I think I must have missed the ex prisoner at some stage - not sure how...

Thumb - can I have one of your toasted hcbs with my tea please? The cat they had following the lion impersonator used to wait at the door to have his feet wiped before he came in

amber32002 · 01/04/2009 13:19

MT said re packing for a holiday that if you've got all the really important bits - you can always get anything else you've forgotton when you get there.

How does that work, then? I mean, I get to the other end, and find I've not packed the (whatever it is) and then complete shock sets in automatically and I have to lock myself in a quiet room for while and hide etc etc (*never ask what the 'etc etc' might be ) whilst waiting for my brain to reset, and meantime our friends are thinking "Oh no, she's off on one of those aspie things again!"

Other people just go out and buy something and their brains don't stop working and they don't panic?? You really did get some fantastic wiring with your brains, didn't you

PS which one of us is the ex prisoner?! It does explain the empty swag bag and the tunnel leading away from the local cells into the back of the stable block now you mention it...

MadBadandDangerousToKnow · 01/04/2009 14:27

Amber - Yes, I guess it's all a question of different wiring. I speak as someone who gets an unreasonable and disproportionate amount of pleasure out of buying (say) Italian shampoo, as every time I wash my hair at home I am mentally transported back to Rome. But I can understand that other people may feel very differently about that.

It was several threads ago, but there was some unseemly incident - involving the theft of my sports car (which unfounded and unkind rumours suggested had been bought with tea room funds) - after which Tea (or was it Daisy? I was too shocked and distressed to remember) found herself in the police cells but managed cunningly to escape.

And may I say that some of you were being rather, ahem, cheeky, I thought, on that other thread, what with the cartwheels and the expositions of the role of , > in tea room life.

It's a bit late but would anyone like some vegetarian/non-vegetarian (thanks to tea room magic) pepperoni pizza for lunch?

amber32002 · 01/04/2009 14:46

Must say I quite liked Rome, but I've never tried washing my hair to remember going there.

I'd love some pizza please.

Goodness me re the car! I never like to ask on these threads whether we're talking about a real-life sports car, or a tea room one...or both! What sort of real/virtual sports car was it??

mistlethrush · 01/04/2009 14:55

I remember that - I arrived in the tearoom shortly before that episode! I've not seen any policemen around recently, so presume either that Mellors has frightened them off or they've found better things to do! (Madbad brought the car to the tearoom but it disappeared later after there had been significant amounts of drinking and dancing on tables if I remember correctly)

Sorry Amber, forgot that that might be a for you! Please forgive me . Do you use lists then to help? And, if you do, do you have a 'standard' one with all the basics that you can add to for each separate trip - or do you start anew each time?

MadBadandDangerousToKnow · 01/04/2009 15:10

I don't buy the shampoo (or whatever) to make me remember the trip, but over the years I have just found that it does. Think of Proust and his madeleines (or not ).

To be honest, I can't remember whether my sports car - which sadly only exists in the tea room dimension - was ever returned to me. I have a feeling it was, but in rather a battered state. Perhaps we can extract a confession later from the usual suspects? Meanwhile, perhaps Mellors could search the outbuildings to see whether there is a neglected and slightly damaged sports cara hidden under the hay, pony traps, special tools for ha-ha construction and other accoutrements of tea room life. And perhaps Amber can advise on sports car maintenance?

amber32002 · 01/04/2009 15:13

MT, no worries . I always explain, rather than leave people to guess. It's just a very different world for me so no way can people remember what might be different/what might work. Hmm, lists...I do have a list, but I rarely use it as then I have to think not only whether I've not packed something, but whether I've also not written it down on the list.

I'm better with visual lists. DS nearly disowned me when I gave him a list of things to take for his rugby match and it was all in hand-drawn pictures but it works for me.

The online grocery things are great because they show pictures of what I've bought. (Though they still turn up with squashed things/wrong things which is .)

amber32002 · 01/04/2009 15:17

PS MadBad, I'm asking no questions about whatever Proust's madeleines might be. I'm wary of googling it, too. All sounds jolly rude if you ask me .

Ah yes, sports car maintenance should be fine. If it's a nice classic one, we can have its cylinders decoked in no time. We'll await Mellors' report from the grounds.

mistlethrush · 01/04/2009 15:28

Amber - you could probably sort yourself a nice database out - with pictures of the things you might need to take and compile a list like grocery shopping from that!

I know that for one of my degrees the tutor suggested making a model of a certain area due to varying levels. I duely made model (took a lot of time) based on OS map etc. I took it in. He said has it told you/taught you anything. I said no - I had thought it all through and worked out the levels before I put in the original drawings. I think some people find it really difficult thinking in 3D....

amber32002 · 01/04/2009 15:43

MT, that's true, I could!

mistlethrush · 01/04/2009 15:49
Grin
Jackbunnysmama · 01/04/2009 16:01

Good morning all!

I need a fortifying tipple cup of tea or coffee because I have my post-op exam later on today. Feeling a bit nervous. Not to make you all (in the Catita sense) but nothing's been in there, IFGWIM, since my op, and of course we all know what an internal exam involves... I might need some virtual hand-holding...

Thumb, I laughed and laughed and laughed at the Mark Twain link. Too funny!! But goodness, I am feeling a little at the thought that I've been coming across as easily offended... I'm really not, most of that is very tongue-in-cheek but it can be hard to communicate in writing. I think I'm with MadBad on petitioning Mumsnet for a [tongue-in-cheek emoticon].

Jackbaby is running around with the brrom and dustpan - it's so precious!!
[PFB emoticon] I've posted new pics on my profile.

Jackbunnysmama · 01/04/2009 16:02

IYGWIM - if you get what I mean

I'm also one of those who can spot typos in my posts from across the room - once I've posted them

amber32002 · 01/04/2009 16:10

Ooo Jackbunnysmama, I shall be keeping my legs fingers crossed for you.

PS your profile says it's a blank white page. Were they pictures of white cats in a snowstorm??

Jackbunnysmama · 01/04/2009 16:24

Whoops. Try looking now. The white cats in a snowstorm have gone back to Alaska.

Jackbunnysmama · 01/04/2009 16:26

Thanks for the good wishes Amber, but I don't think my surgeon could get the job done if I cross my legs .

Any news on your DH's heart issue?

MadBadandDangerousToKnow · 01/04/2009 16:34

I saw some new (to me at least) photos on Jackbunnysmama's page. Sehr sehr cute.

Sending positive vibes in Jackbunnysmama's direction. Hope all goes well.

Jackbunnysmama · 01/04/2009 16:44

LOL at miners' lamps!! Cobwebs, however, are very likely, since that part of my anatomy has been in complete disuse for over a year

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