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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?
Catitainahatita · 24/03/2009 19:08

Tea I sympathise greatly with your predicament. A couple of years ago I decided to get a hair cut (after nearly two decades with long long hair). After discussing the matter with the hairdresser and seeing photos, and mentioning Gywneth Paltrow's haircut in Sliding Doors, she got down to it.

Two terrible discoveries then resulted.

  1. It was my mother's haircut.
  2. I have two crowns on the top of my head and two at the nape of my neck. With really short hair my hair sticks up at the top like pineapple leaves and out at the bottom as well.

I know have a longer version of a smiliar cut. I still look like my mum, but at least I've become immune to the idea of it.

Wear a big hat at the wedding and noone will notice

Catitainahatita · 24/03/2009 19:09

about your dog Amber. I hope you and the family can come to terms with it soon.

teafortwo · 24/03/2009 19:25

Mmm - my Mum is small, Italian looking, well dressed and pretty while I am big, light skinned and 'natural'. So perhaps I don't look as much like her as the mirror initially suggested.

hic (gin with straws really hits you fast)....

Actually the ishoooos run deep with us - My sis is a young, sexy, fun loving, successful, trendy thing and I am her her boring rather drab older sibling. She is a party I am a school night.

I won't know most people at the wedding and due to feeling a bit shy and knowing that there is a strong possibility I wouldn't have had good press in advance of the wedding, I wanted to sort of waft in from Paris looking wow oooh aaaaarrr fab.... but with this hair.... I look like a (whispers incase justabout is about) a vicar's wife (in a bad way obviously while I am sure Mrjustabout looks like a vicar's husband in a HOT way tee hee!!!)!

....However, this gin is really making me think clearly - I shouldn't need to waft anywhere - I should feel OK just being me - whatever my hair chooses to look like!

mistlethrush · 24/03/2009 19:40

T42 - my hair's a bit like that - I really have very little say in the matter! Can you get a fab fascinator to assist with the wafting?

I wish my face was as wrinkle-free as my mother's! Mind you, its mainly as she seems to be completely unable to raise either eyebrow at all!

RS - it can be really difficult when other people's children don't toe the line - but then, our own children don't always toe the line themselves anyway

Racingsnake · 24/03/2009 19:40

Tea, I have been very careful not to accidently see RL photos of fellow tea roomers, so as not to be confused by external appearances. I can therefore categorically tell you that you are not boring, drab or 'school night'. Remember the jail break? Remmber the fact that we have booked the young Debbie Harry to play you in The Tea Room, The Movie^?

CMOTdibbler · 24/03/2009 20:08

Tea - in emergencies such as this (yes, you should be happy to just turn up to the wedding as you, but I know just what you mean), a totally kick ass hat is required. No one will look at your hair, it gives an instant aura of 'see me, groomed, accesorised, and able to find the perfect hat from a little boutique in the xxeme arondissment'

I am glad to report that I do not have my mothers haircut - she is eternally unstylish

thumbwitch · 24/03/2009 20:09

T42 - have you time to dye the tips of your hair some lurid shade? To match your outfit maybe? And how about using gel to good effect to "sculpt" your hair?

MadBadandDangerousToKnow · 24/03/2009 20:19

Tea - Just to echo what others have said about the paramount need for a chic Parisian fascinator or whatever else is tres tres a la mode.

Is there any chance that your sister will have opted for the white meringue dress option? If so, all the more reason to opt for something ultra-stylish and as blatantly French as possible. And about the hair. If you really fear you'll look like your mum (which isn't necessarily a bad thing, anyway) could you opt for the bottle some subtle enhancement to your natural colour?

I have just found a home video of teafortwo at an earlier wedding reception. Shall we all settle down to watch it, with a Bolly or G&T in hand?

teafortwo · 24/03/2009 20:33

DH came home and said hair looks kooky and not like my Mum at all.... I have chosen to believe him and the ladies in the bakery who said "c'est tres tres joli" which helped!

Thanks for all your support!!!!

RC - sorry about your bad day - Recently we bumped into an older friend of Milk's while out on a walk. He was with a school friend. I gave him a kiss hello and said 'bonjour' to his friend. I presented Milk to the boy we know so they could say hello too (this is not weird in France saying hello takes an age) and instead of saying hello, he and his friend skipped around Milk calling her a baby because she had a Maisy mouse backpack. It was horrible. I waited for someone to tell them to stop - no-one did. I said "THAT IS NOT NICE!" Much to the shock of his Mummy and myself! Sounds like your day was filled with moments like that and I sympathize with you lots. xxx Have you sorted the r.e assessment yet, what's the plan?

mistlethrush · 24/03/2009 20:50

My worst outburst at someone else's children was when I was hosting a coffee morning - was going outside with more drinks (about 15 parents and varied children that morning) when I found one persons two (relatively old for the coffee morning) feeding Mistledog with hobnobs!!!!! I'm afraid I was a bit outspoken I have no idea why the mother thought that it was acceptable to let her children take human biscuits and feed them to the dog - but there we are!!!!

Racingsnake · 24/03/2009 20:53

Tea, Wriggle would give anything for a Maisy Mouse backpack! It is very hard watching someone being unkind to your offspring, isn't it? It has made me realise the importance od reaching really good manners very early. Wriggle is very good at 's'il te plait' and 'merci beaucoup', which stands you in good stead if you get a present you don't want.

I'm going to get the children to draw their own Hindu shrine and label why they have chosen different things to include. (We have been learning about Hinduism) Quite a nice activity, but I can't work out how it fits in with the assessment levels. That's the trouble of teaching stuff you know nothing about! I can read up on Hinduism, but I cannot work out the assessment system/

mistlethrush · 24/03/2009 20:58

RS - 1st day at MJ's new school - MJ: 'there's someone wearing a silly hat' - me: 'no, its not a silly hat, its a special hat - you know how we go to school at our church - well, they go to a different sort of church - and they wear their special hat because it shows they go to that church...' !!! No comments about hats since then though

Racingsnake · 24/03/2009 21:41

at silly hat story!

teafortwo · 24/03/2009 21:56

The backpack was a gift from Milk's God Mother who has a bit of a thing for Maisy Mouse too.

Good luck with the RE assessment - I remember the wonderful sense of relief when I was teaching in the UK and the vicar asked if she could teach RE in our school and my ht said "Yes that would be lovely!". It is a tricky subject for primary school children and the guidelines seem so foggy to me!

mistlethrush · 24/03/2009 22:04

Ds got a backpack that he used for nursery from his godmother - it was a scoobydoo one - and he really liked that. He would also have liked a Maizy Mouse one when he was at nursery though !

UniS · 24/03/2009 23:04

pass me a beer quick. then follow it up with somat else and some choc.
Now remind me, most of my day was fine, boy and unis both enjoyed swimming and teh park. it was just teh last 90 mins before bedtime that were vile.
I lost my temper with boy and he had teh back of his leg slapped. :-( ho hum. he was being VERY annoying. We shall try an get tomoorrow off to a good start. I'm considering going back to stickers for wees.... its that bad. Hes been dry for 10 months FFS, he shouldn;t need to have a argument EVER time he needs a wee..

UniS · 24/03/2009 23:08

ohh sorry to seem such an uncaring whiner. many sympathies to Amber. I hadn;t read back. I shall hopefully get to do that sometime tomoorw.
Todays been a bit hectic.

LastOrders · 24/03/2009 23:14

One child families was the first topic I ever posted on (was my first thread too) but I sloped off because we all got an ear bashing!

Does teafortwo still post? (probably under a different name)

Trying to broaden my MN horizons so may hang about here for a while! Now all the controversy has died down God, we went thriugh the mill when it first started!

I got such a flaming when I first was on here it made me cry in RL!

thumbwitch · 24/03/2009 23:23

LastOrders - you're safe here. No bashing allowed (speedy eviction if bashing/bullying discovered).

Teafortwo posting above/below (depending on your page layout)

Have a glass of Bolly and a classy chocolate from your favourite maker.

LastOrders · 24/03/2009 23:47

Oh yeah!

Well I'll pop in and show my face from time to time, it all seems good in here!

I've got an Only - DS 5. Did have my profile open for peeps to see, but closed it for a while!

amber32002 · 25/03/2009 07:07
daisy99divine · 25/03/2009 10:18

Morning my lovelies!

Last orders welcome back! I escaped the one family shenanigans but I am so sorry you were made to cry the tea room is lovely, we are full of love and warmth and support and teeny tiny naked mowhawk babies (we may have to pester Thumb for that link just one more time!)

Here, have a cup of tea

Racing I send you a big ((((HUG))) for wriggle nastiness. I have a thin skin, no, I have no skin when it comes to meanness to my DaisyBoy. Partly because my recollection of child hood is a bewildering round of other people sniggering and me never getting the joke
I would have grabbed Friend and said "Take the flipping present you ingrate!!!" and then wept.

I don't think it's just a sibling thing. My sister used to stick up for me and look after me a lot. She did make me play schools for hour on end though

wriggle I would have kicked the hob nob feeding toddler to touch too. I am forever intervening in inappropriate ways I fear!

tea I think quality wafting is the way forward. Even if your sister thinks you are a school night I bet many of the wedding people will be wowed by the Parisian gamine waif with the chic hair and the wonderful husband and milk...

(and unlike Racing I looked at your wedding photos. You are nothing like my school nights )

My worst hair was I went to the barber and had a #2. I forgot my Mum and Dad were having a big party 3 days later. Queue brazen teenage dilemma - confess you forgot and would never had done such a think really, or brazen it out. Went home. My mum burst into tears....

teafortwo · 25/03/2009 10:41

Hello all - just popping in to find my Mary Janes ready for work.... my hair looks OK this morning if I squint.

What on earth are my shoes doing in Mellors tool shed???? In-fact he seems to have a little collection in there....

Tea pops fascinator on head, squirts chanel no 5 and is ready to go.

OH GOODNESS - Hello lastorders nice to see you - So tell us how are things your side of t'internet? Hows you yummy son and hows life in general?

Runs out the door shouting "I am sooooooooo soooooo late, late, late!!! Blaaaaaaaaaaaaah"

daisy99divine · 25/03/2009 11:31

oh, feeling very gloomy. my nanny is leaving soon and we have been looking for another, it's stressful. Have found a lovely woman who has just emailed to say she has got a "better position". I feel so rejected. I know it is a job and the fact that she has said no now is better than starting and leaving, but still

it brings up such nasty confrontations of working/ not working/ paying someone to care for your child, all sort

i went on the nanny section and read a bit and was really at the way some posters talk about the mums....

amber32002 · 25/03/2009 12:27

I shan't tell you of a business acquaintance of ours whose nanny turned out to be a real-life psycho who slashed their car tyres as revenge for being asked to do something she didn't want to do...or the childminder local to us who would put the children into a cardboard box by the front door if their parents were late to collect them. Yup, fully registered and checked, both of them. Scary stuff.