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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?
thumbwitch · 14/04/2009 20:10

oh yes, Olga da Polga by Michael Bond as well - although possibly a bit young for her, it's one of those things (like Paddington) that can be started younger but will still appeal as they get older.

Jacksmama · 14/04/2009 21:12

Tea, your dress was fabulous!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! !!

OP posts:
mistlethrush · 14/04/2009 23:04

I agree - T you looked great! Very chic!

teafortwo · 15/04/2009 09:17

Thanks for input on outfit - I am a real panicker with clothes I panic before about wearing the right thing then worry aftewards that I wore the wrong thing - so it is very reassuring to get such positive feedback!

Oh Daisy - Mrs Pepperpot, Sam Pig and the Little Grey Rabbit were books I read over and over and over as a child... for a second reading her name I felt like I was eight again!

I was thinking about Roald Dahl.... he is a hero of mine but I wonder if he is a bit racy for the child in question???

The more I think about it the more difficult it is - a key element of lots of childrens' books is magic! Racingsnake had this brilliant book about a boy who's body grows flowers - it is wonderful! But has a magical feel I suspect...

mistlethrush · 15/04/2009 09:29

I liked the Little Grey Rabbit books much more than Beatrix Potter. Really lovely little books.

Amber - please tell us all about Mr B - I hope that he is fitting in well and settling down.

We went to stay with my parents - complete chaos at the moment as they are half way through major building works - they've had the downstairs bathroom removed and changed into a utility room, but havn't yet had the new cloakroom built - or the ensuite - so it was 1 bathroom between 5 which was quite interesting. They are currently without dogs - although they regularly look after different ones. However, the kitchen has been designed with a space carefully worked out where dog bowls fit !!!! I'm not sure that my mother told my father than the space was that large for that reason!!

It transpires that MJ is really quite good at finding Easter Eggs in a garden - he's at a good height which helps. But he did manage to find rather a large number. Which might account for his less than brilliant attempt at supper on the Sunday - that and the biscuits, apricots, walnuts etc etc etc that he snacked on during the afternoon

mistlethrush · 15/04/2009 11:27

Dh is on child care for the rest of the week - he has just taken some bread that they've cooked together out of the oven, so who would like some fresh, still warm, crusty bread with butter on with their lunch/for a snack with honey on?

daisy99divine · 15/04/2009 11:40

oh, Olga da polga! and little grey rabbit! and a lovely book called Emily and the Headmistress - she had to stay there for the holidays, I have just remembered it!!!

Mistle - are the rolls lewd? if so, please yes with honey and coffee!!

How did the one loo go? I was wondering. And why was MJ not ok asking questions in music? We went to DaisyBoy's 2 1/2 year check with the HV last week. 6 kis. 5 silent. daisyboy non-stop talk "Mummy, what's that lady saying, mummy why has she got a badge on, mummy is this the keep well doctor" I was rather proud....but then I set a lot of store by chat, as you can probably tell

CMOTdibbler · 15/04/2009 15:21

I'll have a late lewd roll please

I didn't know anyone else read Mary Plain - I have just taken custody of my copy to read to DS. He thinks Olga da Polga and Teddy Robinson are funny

Have just discovered that my conference this weekend starts with a Guiness and Oysters reception. I can't stand oysters, and can't drink Guiness (although I love it). 2 days of talking about prostates (3 if you include tomorrow when I have a talk to present to engineering federation managers), and I'll be ready for a drink come Sunday. And DH has an exam next week, so I am on nagging duty.

UniS · 15/04/2009 15:32

The magic issue does make it tricky doesn;t it. I'm not 100% sure where the parents draw the line... We watched an animated movie with them full of talking animals and other fantastic things and that was fine... but other family memebrs have been asked not to give certain types of lego as too "magic" in theme... I'd like to give books that the kids will read rather than that the parents will move to a high shelf as not suitable.

thumbwitch · 15/04/2009 16:36

are they very strong Christians then? I wouldn't have thought it would be an issue at that age - surely the parents can explain to their DDs that "it's not real".
All fairy stories have some element of unrealism in them, did they miss out on those too? Can't imagine little girls growing up without ever having been exposed to Snow White, Sleeping Beauty, Cinderella etc.!

amber32002 · 15/04/2009 16:48

Well, I'm not at all sure what strength of Christian they are, but our Bishops tend to love a good story with a bit of magic in it, as it lets them discuss themes of good and evil in ways that people can relate to. But I guess every parent has to make their own choice

Poor little Mr B has kennel cough from having been in all these different kennels and transport situations. He's got a very sore throat and is feeling very sorry for himself. Actually, I feel the same way, but I don't know what my excuse is . Must try a dose of tearoom honey and lemon tea, I think.

CMOT, 2 days of talking about prostates with engineering managers? The mind boggles! Ds's exams are looming, so it's nagging duty for me too.

CMOTdibbler · 15/04/2009 16:52

Only one evening with the engineers (they are coming to admire the factory), two days with doctors.

Poor Mr B - have some manuka honey and lemon for you both

amber32002 · 15/04/2009 16:54

The engineers with whom you will be discussing prostates are going to be admiring a factory? By gum, I'm confused now!

CMOTdibbler · 15/04/2009 16:59

It's all part of the tour - first they get bored by the history of the company and our financials, then the media bloke does a radiotherapy for dummies bit, then we show them what the stuff we make is used for (thats me and my prostates, and someone else and lungs), then they see it being made and look impressed at our lean, just in time factory floor. They usually like the pretty lights in the data centre too

amber32002 · 15/04/2009 17:07

You give them a talk on the history of your financials? No wonder they're bored, poor people! I'd want to lok at the pretty lights too.

PS there's no point radiotherapising dummies - they're not real, y'know

Shall go lie down for a bit until my brain reboots and stops thinking literally...

thumbwitch · 15/04/2009 18:00

are they very strong Christians then? I wouldn't have thought it would be an issue at that age - surely the parents can explain to their DDs that "it's not real".
All fairy stories have some element of unrealism in them, did they miss out on those too? Can't imagine little girls growing up without ever having been exposed to Snow White, Sleeping Beauty, Cinderella etc.!

thumbwitch · 15/04/2009 18:06

sorry, sorry, crap computer, please ignore random second posting of same post

mistlethrush · 15/04/2009 18:12

Now that was a pretty impressive double click TW!

Then you get an ostensibly 'Christian' book like the tLtWatW (or have I been mislead?!) which is full of 'magic'....

Talking animals etc - I'd have thought that you'd be fine with both Mary Plain and Little Grey Rabbit books - just the characters talking - no other stretch of the imagination afaicr. However, the Talking Parcel (Gerrald Durrell) which is another book which would be great would definitely incorporate a significant amount of magic....

Amber - I hope that you and Mr B feel better soon. When we got our 2nd x (when still at home with my parents) - she got kennel cough for a similar reason - we ended up treating both dogs so that the other didn't catch it. I hope Mrs C is coping with the new introduction too!

UniS · 15/04/2009 19:40

TW- erm yes pretty strong. Missionarys. To englnad... Agahst at teh state of teh church in the UK becasue people make small talk after teh service rather than ask your opinion on teh biblical teaching the sermon.

They homescol , don;t trust public education not to give kids funny ideas about it being Ok to be gay or scientfic.
We kept quiet at teh weekend about our not being churchgoers. Missed it with decent excuse on sunday as boy was still asleep and SiL being sick.

MadBadandDangerousToKnow · 15/04/2009 19:44

Well, I think I've just about caught up with everything that's been happening while the MadBadFamily has been incarcerated with the in-laws.

New dogs - welcome Mr B
Tea looking tres tres chic at the wedding
Mellors unmasked as handling 'hot' lawnmowers - surely not?
Choral performances
A chocolate feast
A discussion of children's books - would Gerald Durrell's My Family and Other Animals be acceptable? I loved it but was probably nine when I read it.

And so much more besides. I'm exhausted just thinking about it. I'm going to have a restorative glass of Bolly. Would anyone like to join me?

mistlethrush · 15/04/2009 20:05

Yes please, I would like a glass.

Feeling a bit smug - got home, had to nag ds a little to eat up, but we had a very happy bathtime, happy toothclean, some nice reading (he read two stories - most of the words, then I did one more) then settled down happily, so very happy bedtime...

CMOTdibbler · 15/04/2009 20:08

Amber - we do actually irradiate dummies, as humans are inconveniently variable. And without the holes to insert measurement devices into so easily. It lets us check that the whole system is behaving itself

UniS - they sound very hardcore. Best to stay on the very uncontraversial side of things

My family and other animals a bit risque for them I would think

How were the in laws MadBad ?

Bolly would be lovely

MadBadandDangerousToKnow · 15/04/2009 20:25

That sounds great, MT.

The in-laws were the same as ever. These are MabBadBloke's sister and her dh. When I was little, I always wanted an older sister but now that I've got one (sort of) it's very trying. We're not on the same wavelength at all and I always feel she's having a dig - constant references to her having been to the university of life (whereas I ponced about at the taxpayers' expense) and the like, while I wear a forced smile. Hey ho.

But it's all over now until the next time.

Slurp!

mistlethrush · 15/04/2009 20:33

Madbad - I still can't get over MiL's recent stay and results - she was looking after MJ (at her request, although really useful for us too) - I came back from work and thought MJ looked a bit warm - suggested he took his fleece off which he was very happy to comply with. Underneath that I found he had 2 tshirts on - later I discovered that she had picked her way through ds's wardrobe and ferreted out a vest for him to wear as well!!!! And ds normally complains on walks that he's too hot and I have to carry his coat on cold days

MadBadandDangerousToKnow · 15/04/2009 20:50

Oh, MT, the joys of in-laws. I am sitting on my hands, trying not to release all my SIL anecdotes but I will share one.

I had, I think, quite a low key wedding. Church ceremony, one bridesmaid, reception for 60 (iirc) guests, room decorated with flowers grown by my cousin. SIL (who at that time was single) upset me greatly on the day by telling me, rather sneeringly, that 'if she got married, she wouldn't want this amount of fuss and would have something very simple'. Ouch. Roll on 15 years and her wedding had five bridesmaids, 200 guests and a flower budget which would have bought us a week in Centre Parcs (we had stupidly offered to pay before we realised she had delusions of grandeur). Pah.

Now that I've vented, would anyone else like some Bolly?