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Feminism: Sex and gender discussions

The Bluestocking Pub: Infinite Cocktails, Questionable Logistics

1000 replies

MyrtleLion · 16/05/2026 19:56

Welcome to the nth iteration of the Bluestocking women’s pub, where gerbils are staff, the drinks are free, and alcohol has no effect except to get you to the sweet spot just before the drink you really shouldn’t have had.

Men can go to the Staunch Ally next door.

It’s OK if you don’t understand. Just assume everything is normal.

Previous thread is here:

https://www.mumsnet.com/talk/womens_rights/5523989-bluestocking-womens-pub-its-maytime

The Bluestocking Pub: Infinite Cocktails, Questionable Logistics
OP posts:
Thread gallery
158
MarieDeGournay · 23/05/2026 17:14

Waitwhat23 · 23/05/2026 17:06

Thank you! And no. It's likely to be hard for a few more weeks at least.

But it is what it is.

Welcome back WW23!

The gerbils want to help you at work, they were so keen I hadn't the heart to tell them that I don't think you're work involves buckets and sweeping brushes.. .Maybe they could do the housework for you while you're very busy at workSmile

The Bluestocking Pub: Infinite Cocktails, Questionable Logistics
AngleofRepose · 23/05/2026 17:19

Waitwhat23 · 23/05/2026 15:57

Glad I found you all again - these threads move so quickly that I find myself lost! and work has been so unrelentingly shite that I needed a couple of quiet weeks.

Aff to read the rest of the thread.

Welcome, pull up a chair, I don't know if I was here last time you were, but I'm glad you found it at last. We've had some shenanigans going on, but you'll find out eventually. Stuff's happening and we don't know where Gosie is...

Thehorticulturalhussie · 23/05/2026 17:38

Thank you bar gerbils, that’s a perfect Dirty Dogma. Keep the change.

PastaAllaNorma · 23/05/2026 17:45

Edith, it's not the end of asparagus season until the solstice! We can keep cutting it until then. We're having it three times a week. It's my absolute favourite spring food.

My mum's funeral was lovely. A humanist celebrant at the green burial site, a woollen coffin, a bouquet of locally grown flowers and a recording of my nieces singing her favourite song. Almost three hundred people came.

The food and drink place afterwards was overwhelmed and ran out of food in 20 minutes. They weren't expecting such a big crowd.

MyrtleLion · 23/05/2026 18:03

I hear jackdaws, pigeons and blackbirds. Occasionally a robin.

More Gosie now or at 7pm?

OP posts:
EmpressaurusKitty · 23/05/2026 18:19

Now!

Kitty is very eager to help.

ChristmasStars · 23/05/2026 18:20

@Thehorticulturalhussie the only decision I have made about any potential funeral is the Detectorists theme tune. I love it.

At the end of the day, funerals are for the comfort of those left behind really so part of me thinks my family can do what they like. However a good friend died a few years ago, not at all unexpected, and had left no hint of what she wanted at her funeral. It was very hard for her family. So I guess a compromise would be good.

AlexandraLeaving · 23/05/2026 18:27

👻👻

😱re Gosie!!

But yay re Mr Puffling!

just catching up on everyone’s news - and funeral plans 💐💐🍸

MyrtleLion · 23/05/2026 18:30

No Arrest Record
In which everybody overreacts completely correctly...

The atmosphere inside Charles Cross police station had changed completely.

The broad-faced polecat sergeant had disappeared through a side door carrying the copy of the Daily Gerbil. Radios crackled somewhere deeper in the building. Another officer was already taking notes from Hedgehog while a second typed rapidly at a terminal without looking up.

Nobody was humouring anybody anymore.

Octavia Briefcase stood beside the custody desk, very still, watching the station’s Bank Holiday indifference vanish. She turned sharply to Hedgehog. “Call the Bluestocking,” she said. “Now.”

In the Bluestocking, Maud snatched up the phone. “Hedgehog? Have you got Gosie?”

“No.”

The single word changed the atmosphere of the pub at once.

“What’s happened?

“Maud,” Hedgehog said, “there’s no arrest record.”

At the Bluestocking, the pub fell silent. Even the Choirbils had stopped singing.

Maud froze. “What do you mean,” she said, “there’s no arrest record?”

Hedgehog’s voice crackled faintly down the line beneath the distant sound of radios and traffic. “I mean Gosie was taken by people pretending to be police.”

For one long moment nobody in the Bluestocking moved at all. Then Gubbins whispered, “The sea has got her.”

Instant pandemonium.

“I KNEW IT WOULD BE THE SEA.”
“WE SHOULD NEVER HAVE TRUSTED WATER.”
“GOSIE’S BEEN TAKEN BY SMUGGLERS.”

One Choirbil burst into tears so dramatically that two others had to support her onto a bar stool while continuing to cry themselves.

“IS IT PIRATES?”

“IT IS NOT PIRATES,” Maud snapped. Nobody listened.

“THEY’VE DEFINITELY TAKEN HER TO INTERNATIONAL WATERS.”
“THAT’S HOW JURISDICTION WORKS.”
“THEY’VE DEFINITELY WEIGHTED HER DOWN.”
“WITH CHAINS.”
“AND ANCHORS.”
“THE SEA IS FULL OF MURDER.”

“IT IS NOT MURDER,” shouted Maud, even though she was not entirely certain herself.

“Hedgehog,” Maud said, “what happens now?”

“Well,” said Hedgehog, “we start a search. But on a hot Bank Holiday Saturday with half the South West wandering about eating ice cream, where exactly do you begin?”

A shriek sounded faintly down the line. Maud frowned. “I can hardly hear you. What’s all that noise?”

“Screeching gulls,” she said. “They’ve been bothering us since we arrived.”

From a windowsill near the Bluestocking front door, @Chickadeeinme listened with increasing concern. She suddenly sat bolt upright. No. The answer was obvious.
She flew out of the Bluestocking to the waterfront in Portland, muttering darkly about time zones and the regrettable limitations of tiny wings. Calling in at Free Range Fish and Lobster, hard by Becky’s Diner on Commercial Street, she ordered one extremely large Maine lobster to be mailed express delivery to Kevin and Steve in Plymouth.

“It’ll take them so long to work out how to get the meat off that bugger,” she chortled, “that it will totally shut them up for a few hours.”

As Chickadee arrived back at the Bluestocking, Maud ended the call and looked around the pub. “All right,” she said. “I was wrong.”

That got their attention.

“I said earlier that we did not need an international rescue operation.”

Several gerbils nodded tearfully.

“We now need an international rescue operation.”

Three gerbils began applauding.

“I TOLD YOU WE NEEDED THE ROPE.”
“THIS IS EXACTLY WHAT THE SEMAPHORE FLAGS WERE FOR.”
“THIS IS WHY I LEARNT KNOTS.”

One Choirbil cried even harder with vindication.

“All right,” said Maud suddenly. “Lanterns. Rope. Medical supplies. Get everything down to the dock. Move. NOW. If Gosie’s out there somewhere, we are not sitting here waiting for the tide.”

The Bluestocking erupted into motion.

Gerbils sprinted in all directions carrying entirely disproportionate quantities of rope. A capybara thundered past with three lifejackets and what appeared to be a harpoon. Somebody began packing emergency Tunnocks. Two Choirbils attempted to carry a crate significantly larger than either of them while continuing to cry. Near the stairs, a badger was arguing passionately for the inclusion of soup.

Then Maud stopped speaking.

Beyond the open doors, the dock lay empty beneath the harbour lights.

The galleon had gone.

https://myrtlelion.substack.com/p/no-arrest-record

The Bluestocking Pub: Infinite Cocktails, Questionable Logistics
OP posts:
ErrolTheDragon · 23/05/2026 18:36

It can be easier if the family knows what’s wanted. MiL gave no clue - tbh I don’t think she much cared - so DH followed what she’d arranged for FiL as she must have thought that was ok.
DM had liaised with my older DB and made a notebook with suggested readings and hymns, including which tunes to use. After the main service, for the bit at the crem which was just family and a few close friends, she deliberately chose an unusual tune. DB, who is an excellent organist&pianist, played it through once and off we went - shaky first verse but we’d nailed it by the end. A teacher to the end - and beyond.😂

AngleofRepose · 23/05/2026 18:44

Oh look at the weeping gerbils!
( I love Maud's outfit, though)

Magpiecomplex · 23/05/2026 18:55

I've been down to do a reading at a friend's funeral for years (we're early 50s). By contrast, I really don't care about mine. Plant me under a rose bush and that'll do me.

Thehorticulturalhussie · 23/05/2026 19:02

ErrolTheDragon · 23/05/2026 18:36

It can be easier if the family knows what’s wanted. MiL gave no clue - tbh I don’t think she much cared - so DH followed what she’d arranged for FiL as she must have thought that was ok.
DM had liaised with my older DB and made a notebook with suggested readings and hymns, including which tunes to use. After the main service, for the bit at the crem which was just family and a few close friends, she deliberately chose an unusual tune. DB, who is an excellent organist&pianist, played it through once and off we went - shaky first verse but we’d nailed it by the end. A teacher to the end - and beyond.😂

My father played piano at his own funeral which made people laugh. It would have made him laugh too, he had a silly sense of humility. He had been an excellent player but in his later years he became a fabulously unreliable musician and did a LOT of improvising and almost always segued into Smoke Gets In Your Eyes. His happy enthusiasm absolutely shone through his playing which was unmistakably him. So I just had to do it.

WearyAuldWumman · 23/05/2026 19:32

Had a lovely lunch.

unfortunately, some drunks on bus home. They all got off at Dunfermline. Last leg of the bus journey now.

AngleofRepose · 23/05/2026 19:44

WearyAuldWumman · 23/05/2026 19:32

Had a lovely lunch.

unfortunately, some drunks on bus home. They all got off at Dunfermline. Last leg of the bus journey now.

Glad to hear you survived the crowds,

EmpressaurusKitty · 23/05/2026 19:48

Next week is quite weird for me. I’ve got the 3rd anniversary of my mum’s death, which I always book off work so I can go for a long, quiet walk somewhere & remember her. Then the day after is the 2nd anniversary of Kitty & her son moving into my flat as foster cats, so something to celebrate.

Mum didn’t leave any plans for her funeral. We kept it simple. We had her favourite songs - You’re the best thing that ever happened to me, which was hers & Dad’s song, & Close To You by the Carpenters. My aunt & I did the eulogy between us, & the crematorium chapel was absolutely packed.

I have vague ideas about leaving my body to medical science but haven’t actually done anything about it.

FuzzyPuffling · 23/05/2026 19:50

EdithStourton · 23/05/2026 16:50

I went to a sailor's funeral a few years ago. The choir master had suggested Never Weatherbeaten Sail, and it was perfect.

I absolutely love this piece. I sang it once, about 25 years ago and our paths have never crossed again...yet.

MyrtleLion · 23/05/2026 19:51

AngleofRepose · 23/05/2026 18:44

Oh look at the weeping gerbils!
( I love Maud's outfit, though)

Credit to @Boiledbeetle. It's one of hers from the Woolly Hugs thread with KnottyandPistey. Otherwise AI will represent her badly.

The Bluestocking Pub: Infinite Cocktails, Questionable Logistics
OP posts:
MyrtleLion · 23/05/2026 19:59

EmpressaurusKitty · 23/05/2026 19:48

Next week is quite weird for me. I’ve got the 3rd anniversary of my mum’s death, which I always book off work so I can go for a long, quiet walk somewhere & remember her. Then the day after is the 2nd anniversary of Kitty & her son moving into my flat as foster cats, so something to celebrate.

Mum didn’t leave any plans for her funeral. We kept it simple. We had her favourite songs - You’re the best thing that ever happened to me, which was hers & Dad’s song, & Close To You by the Carpenters. My aunt & I did the eulogy between us, & the crematorium chapel was absolutely packed.

I have vague ideas about leaving my body to medical science but haven’t actually done anything about it.

For anyone who wants to do this there is a lot of information here: https://www.hta.gov.uk/body-donation-faqs

One of the lovely things that happens for the families of those who donate is a joint memorial after their body has finally served its purpose. A lot of student doctors gather together and give thanks for those who have helped them learn.

It is also possible to hold a memorial ceremony without a body for those who might find a funeral helpful.

Medical school and body donation FAQs | Human Tissue Authority

Our role is to make sure that organisations remove, store, and use brains, bodies and tissues in an appropriate, respectful and well-managed way, and that the wishes of individual patients and their families are respected.

https://www.hta.gov.uk/body-donation-faqs

OP posts:
FuzzyPuffling · 23/05/2026 20:08

I watched (and filmed) the dissection of a brain at a Brain Bank- for work. It was not only extremely interesting but I was so impressed by the quiet dignity and absolute respect given to the donor.

EmpressaurusKitty · 23/05/2026 20:15

That’s an incentive to get on & sort it out! Thanks @MyrtleLion & @FuzzyPuffling.

Igneococcus · 23/05/2026 20:51

I'm back from Poland. I might move there, not just for the pierogi and the quince vodka but for the buzz and the can do attitude you can feel everywhere (or at least in Warsaw).
There was a Ukrainian soldier on my flight from Warsaw to Amsterdam, in fatigues and with the badge of his regiment and the Ukrainian flag on his pack. He talked to the woman next to him on the bus from the plane to the terminal and said that he loves Amsterdam and when the war is over he'll take his wife there to show the city to her. I felt (again) so ashamed how we in the West/Europe have dropped the ball wrt our defense. I have all my fingers crossed for him and his wife. I hope he'll get to show her Amsterdam.

WearyAuldWumman · 23/05/2026 20:58

ErrolTheDragon · 23/05/2026 18:36

It can be easier if the family knows what’s wanted. MiL gave no clue - tbh I don’t think she much cared - so DH followed what she’d arranged for FiL as she must have thought that was ok.
DM had liaised with my older DB and made a notebook with suggested readings and hymns, including which tunes to use. After the main service, for the bit at the crem which was just family and a few close friends, she deliberately chose an unusual tune. DB, who is an excellent organist&pianist, played it through once and off we went - shaky first verse but we’d nailed it by the end. A teacher to the end - and beyond.😂

I think I've told the story of the music used in DH's funeral in another thread.

For the reading, I gave the celebrant an extract from The Parting Glass.

So far as I can ascertain, the grandchild approved because "It's an Ed Sheeran song..." Well, I suppose it is in a way.

There's more than one version - that's what happens with folk music - but I used the one from DH's handwritten songbook:

O, all the friends that e'er I had,
They're sorry for my going away.
And all the sweethearts e'er I had,
Would wish me one more day to stay.
But since it falls unto my lot,
That I should rise and you should not,
I gently rise and softly call,
Goodnight and God be with you all.

WearyAuldWumman · 23/05/2026 21:01

There was a bit of bother on the bus back, but the Buckie inebriated Pars fan shut up when he thought that the driver was phoning the polis...

One funny thing that happened was when Pars fan asked "Where's Calvin?"

"Up the stairs!" quoth another fan.

"Whaurs the stairs?" quoth the first fan whilst moving to the other end of the bus to look for them.

It was a single decker.

AuntieMsDamsonCrumble · 23/05/2026 21:04

WearyAuldWumman · 23/05/2026 20:58

I think I've told the story of the music used in DH's funeral in another thread.

For the reading, I gave the celebrant an extract from The Parting Glass.

So far as I can ascertain, the grandchild approved because "It's an Ed Sheeran song..." Well, I suppose it is in a way.

There's more than one version - that's what happens with folk music - but I used the one from DH's handwritten songbook:

O, all the friends that e'er I had,
They're sorry for my going away.
And all the sweethearts e'er I had,
Would wish me one more day to stay.
But since it falls unto my lot,
That I should rise and you should not,
I gently rise and softly call,
Goodnight and God be with you all.

The Parting Glass is one of my favourite songs WAW. I sang it with my old choir at the end of the humanist funeral of one of our members. It was beautiful.

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