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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?
MadBadandDangerousToKnow · 02/04/2009 00:34

It all depends on definitions. Chocolate bars (my guilty pleasure) are forbidden and sorely missed, but chocolate in cakes and biscuits is still permitted. They'd have to be as life would be unmanageable otherwise!

amber32002 · 02/04/2009 07:52

Morning all!

How are we all?

Racingsnake · 02/04/2009 08:52

What camel???????

I spend one evening away and the tea room gets infested with camels?

Amber, how is dh bearing up to the stress of the tests and the waiting? My dh has heard that his latest chest xray has shown up something they can't understand and we're all back to worrying again, just when things had got so much better.

Don't understand the blank screen on the British Council link; I found the site by googling 'British Council + comenius' and then following links to the 'training database'.

I, too, love brassicas, although bubble and squeak never seems to work when I make it.

Tea, parents at my school can be very sensitive about the 'n' word too. I was taught that it is important to distinguish between the child and the behaviour; it is the behaviour which is naughty. At the moment Wriggle is rather proud of being 'fo-folle' (silly) when she throws all my books about, empties the knives and forks on the ground etc. Doting Papa never corrects.

Catita, I wonder whether hitting is more a boy thing? (Hopelessly ingrained stereotyping?) Wriggle's two-year old boy friend had a lot of problems with hitting and hair pulling (which I put down to hair envy as Wriggle had lustrous locks quite early, while he still looked rather like a boiled egg with a mullet). His poor mother got very embarrassed whenever they were with other children. Wriggle responds very quickly to me saying 'gently' and strokes my face. (But then she is too shy to hit other children. She does a good line in sneaky shoving.)

MadBad, I tried giving up chocolate for Lent, but failed. I have done it before and felt very virtuous, but I think this year was a bit more stressful. Our curate says you are allowed a day off on Sundays.

mistlethrush · 02/04/2009 09:14

RS - I like the suggestion of a day off on Sundays! Mind you, I've not had the slightest scrap for over 12 years now.... So I give chocolate up for Lent too - I'm always very sucessful! Sorry that there is ? on latest xray - do you have an appointment to go back again - and what have they told you so far? Its horrid when they just say there's something wrong or we need to see you but then don't say why etc, particularly if you then have to wait for an appointment.

Amber - re lists - hope that they prove to be helpful!!!! Where did that camel come from, I've not seen it about before?

Ds has told me that he doesn't like courgettes at school - but he has agreed that he does like courgettes at home when mummy or daddy cook them more carefully . I remember lunches in hall at Uni - Sundays you went to breakfast and could already smell the veg cooking for lunch . I tried to go walking most weekends so I could request sandwiches - plain cheese, but even if I didn't go, they could be spiced up a bit with some mustard and then toasted in our little kitchen areas.... Much prefered living in shared houses in terms of eating though!

mistlethrush · 02/04/2009 09:20

Oh - and hitting and hair pulling - not exclusively boys - but particularly when they're about ds's age, it does seem to have largely settled into a sex based split...

We sorted out the hair pulling when ds was quite young - as I've got longish hair and couldn't cope with it being pulled all the time. We do quite a bit of counting down in our house - after several goes at getting cooperation the normal routes that have gone completely over the top of ds's head we give one last statement and a threat and then start counting. It can start at 10 (particularly if its something like finding shoes and putting them on), it often starts at 5 (eg if its starting to get dressed rather than dancing around the house naked) and occasionally it starts at 3!!!! You can, of course, time the next number quite carefully, and slow up or speed up on the way down - and add in 1/2s if necessary (usually causes a smile because, if we're adding things like that it means that he is at least trying to cooperate!)

amber32002 · 02/04/2009 11:53

The camel seemed to have arrived when the bedouin tent was set up in the side garden.

DH is truly cheesed off with all the testing, unsurprisingly. Especially since he'd always had really good results up to now from standard healthchecks and now it reads more like a disaster zone in some bits.

Some carrot and pepper soup and a lewd roll will be available shortly for those interested...?

mistlethrush · 02/04/2009 12:22

Lunch sounds good Amber.

I hope that the tests don't continue too long - the continue waiting for results and what's going to happen next is always horrid. When I was off work for 6 mo it was over the winter - and it was a marvellous spring - I found myself sitting out in the sun with a cup of tea and just going to sleep (in several coats) - people kept on saying how well I looked even though I could hardly walk 100 yards at times. But the good weather did make me feel a bit more cheerful - hope it has the same effect on MrA.

MadBadandDangerousToKnow · 02/04/2009 13:29

We do the countdown thing too. I think, though, that it might have backfired because nothing ever happens until we get to 1, if you see what I mean!

That soup smells yummy, Amber. I'll just help myself to a mugful and a lewd roll as I have to get back to work. I do hope that things come good very soon for your husband and his health checks.

mistlethrush · 02/04/2009 13:49

We quite often get action before then Madbad - he knows that acting on 1 is too late - but if action is happening, counting stops (although it can resume from where it got to on occasions)

Very nice soup Amber, thank you.

I think I'll just take this cup of tea outside to the nice dark blue painted outdoor furniture and sit in the sun and look at -Mellors-working-in-the-garden-in-the-sun-with-his-shirt---off- the daffodils,

mistlethrush · 02/04/2009 13:49

that didn't quite work. Sorry!

MadBadandDangerousToKnow · 02/04/2009 14:07

Clearly, Mistle, you were distracted by Mellors' manly physique the daffodils blowing in the breeze.

As for the countdown and the development of brinkmanship, just give it time!

mistlethrush · 02/04/2009 14:45

I've lost count - how old is your's again?

at being distracted at the daffodils!!!! If I'd left it just crossing out the words it'd've been fine: having done that I thought to myself - why don't I just replace the ' ' with '-' and it will do a line throught the whole lot as it would be written down normally....

CMOTdibbler · 02/04/2009 15:05

Have just booked Ds's party. I feel a bit as I'll be away the weekend before and after that at conferences.

We do the counting thing - I tell DS what will happen on zero, and actually he starts moving (with cheeky grin) on 5 - but times his end action for 1

Catitainahatita · 02/04/2009 15:52

Camels... oh good god where will it end? Are we to have a zoo in the back garden like Louis XVI (I think it was him, and various Russian tsars and perhaps Henry VIII too) ???

Racing I don't think the hitting is a boy thing. As I said, I was a violent child, hitting and biting with gay abandon. In DS's case it is more an expression of emotion: frustration and anger usually, which is why I was so nonplussed at the park; there was no reason for him to be angry. The putting him down (tried yesterday) is certainly a punishment, if the tears are any evidence. Hopefully he will soon associate one and the other.

Thumb it sounds like your DS is just like mine: although, as well as the remote,he also likes to flay around a plastic baseball bat (kindly bought for him by DH) in the vecinity of my head.

Mistle Yes, the art of brushing a screaming toddlers teeth, it's a great challenge. I think I do a similar version to you. I also find that the more screaming the better (ie mouth open) because if he opts for clamping his mouth shut and giving me and the brush the evil eye, things are so much harder.

Jackbunnysmama · 02/04/2009 19:04

It's time for elevenses here - I'm assuming you're all already into the booze, however!

Hope everyone's well today. JB slept until 7:45 am today, bless him!! I feel like a new woman!

I had my check-up with my surgeon yesterday, and she's very pleased with me. I still have some healing left to do, though, and she wants to see me again in 8 weeks. She described the op in an extraordinary amount of detail which left me feeling a bit , but the details did explain perfectly why I'd had so much pain for the past year. Well, no more pain - have been feeling very good for at least the last few weeks, and expect to that to continue. [relieved emoticon]
Thank you all for the virtual hand-holding!

Catitainahatita · 02/04/2009 19:15

Thanks. Glad to hear all went well at your check-up. It must be a relief (in a way) to know that it has been recognised that your pain had a real physical cause and it wasn't just "in the mind" as often complaints can be classed by our dear Drs.

I forgot to to say yesterday that the new pictures of Jackbaby are very cute indeed.

teafortwo · 02/04/2009 19:47

Jacksmama - Great news re your successful recovery!!!

Racingsnake - The difference between managing behavior in school and at home is an interesting subject. I often use the same techniques with Milk as I would at school - modeling, discussing expectations in advance, ignoring things I don't like, praising things I do, explain in advance and talking over calmly when Milk does something I don't like.

Yet, somethings are very different. The right choice, wrong choice thing I realize I started too early. It takes a long time for children to completely understood themselves as a people so how could she separate that person she doesn't yet completely understand into who she is and what she does?

I think I will revisit the concept of choice when she is a bit older. As I feel more comfortable with these words - but right now she just doesn't understand what it means (She still talks about herself in the third person so obviously still isn't entirely 100percent 'with it' on who she is) and as I said before she completely got 'naughty' as meaning something not nice!

How did I miss the camels???? I better pop back and read this thread more carefully.....

Jackbunnysmama · 02/04/2009 20:27

Thanks tea!
I'm glad it all looks so good, although there's still a bit to go, and (poor DH) we're not cleared for hanky-panky for another 6 weeks... ...
I'm actually feeling a bit low today because I've had to revisit everything that happened when JB was born... it still makes me feel like crying or punching something, but I'm trying to focus on the fact that I'm nearly well again, and JB is lovely and perfect... I did a huge whine and rant on the birth injury thread, so I'll spare you all , as long as you keep the champagne coming!!

Oh, BTW... the camel... Surely not what could be considered a domestic pet?? Perhaps it should be moved out to the Bison's pasture...

Jackbunnysmama · 02/04/2009 20:30

Gosh, we've gone and filled up half the thread again! We'll be in Tea Room the Seventh soon... someone else needs to start the next Tea Room, I've done two already. Feel free to cut and paste this one's intro, however... I tried to make us all sound a bit less mad eccentric than we are...

Oh, look what I found!

Yummy! This is called a Sparkling Lemondrop. Mmmmm...

teafortwo · 02/04/2009 20:34

Sparkling Lemondrop???

Sniffs Jacksmama's glass suspiciously.... is it really nice??? Or are you saying that to trick us all????

Jackbunnysmama · 02/04/2009 20:46

Are you kidding? What's not to like about Prosecco and Limoncello??? It's YUMMY!!

Besides, April Fool's was yesterday, and having been "gotten but good" by a friend, I refuse to trick anyone else.

Prosecco and Alize Passionfruit is good too.

Or Prosecco and Chambord.

Or Prosecco, and well, just about anything!!
(Maybe not curry or beer though...)

teafortwo · 02/04/2009 20:54

ok - copies Jacksmama's cocktail style and makes enough for everybody.... even the camel....

UniS · 02/04/2009 21:05

Thanks, now I can tyope even more wonky and blame teh cocktails.

Donk · 02/04/2009 21:39

Camels???!!!

I can smell a camel!!

I hope it hasn't been allowed to eat my hay pile!

Isn't PolicyWonks Blog exciting! I've been lurking on the thread to watch what goes on.

Carrot anyone?

Donk · 02/04/2009 23:18

Is anyone there?
I've done it again - sent everyone to sleep.
Perhaps it's the carrots!

Hey ho!
Goodnight all

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