It was on a beautiful spring day, when there wasn't a cloud
in the sky and the air was filled with birdsong that Teddy and I got
married. However it was an effort to get Teddy — still in his all-body
plaster cast —into the church. But with the help of six burly men and a crane,
it was done, and when the minister pronounced us man and wife we believed
ourselves to be the happiest couple in the world. Outside of the church my work
colleagues —all tea ladies —formed a
guard-of-honour, and with their tea pots raised to the sky , they cheered
plaster man and I.
Thursday, 12 May 2016
Storm in a teacup: memoirs of a tea lady. Chapter 16
Storm in a teacup: memoirs of a tea lady. Chapter 16
Monday, 18 April 2016
Storm in a teacup: memoirs of a tea lady Chapter 15
Our courtship was a brief and happy one. Teddy and I got to know one another extremely
well over endless cups of tea. Teddy—still
in hospital, and still wearing a full head and body plaster cast— was a man of few words, but a
wonderful listener as I told him all about myself and my mother and my hometown
of Wattlebird. I once asked Teddy to
tell me a little about himself. He lifted an arm and pointed at the window
where the only view was of the sky, which on this particular day was of an
unbroken blue.
Sunday, 3 April 2016
Storm in a teacup: memoirs of a tea lady. Chapter 14
I met my future husband-to-be at Royal Perth
Hospital where I had already been working for a number of
years, pushing my tea- trolley from ward-to-ward, morning, noon and night.
Dishing out endless cups of tea to all those sick people was a huge
responsibility that I saw as a privilege.
Early
one morning while doing the breakfast teas on the orthopedics’ ward, I spied a
new patient in a hospital bed but the poor man’s entire head and body were encased
in a white plaster cast, and his limbs were strung up and pillows were propping
up his head. All I could see were his
twinkly eyes, smooth mouth and the pink tips of his fingers and toes.
“Tea?”
I asked.
“Yes
please,’ he uttered as if from far away, which I suppose he was.
“Sugar?”
“Yes.”
“Milk?”
I
made him a cup of sweet milky tea with a straw which I inserted into the hole
where his mouth would be. He slurped up the tea. He wiggled the tips of his fingers
as if to say, “Good.”
As
I stood there steadying the straw for him, our eyes met. It was love at first
sight.
I discovered from one of the nurses that he’d
been in a terrible accident; that he’d fallen asleep on a mountain path and how
a runaway steamroller had rolled straight over the top of him.
Next day, I read his
bedside notes. My plaster-man’s name was
Edward— “Teddy”—Oxwell— and he was twenty-five years old. And his vital signs were” Pulse rate 72,
Blood Pressure 110/60, Respirations 18 and he weigh 72 kilograms. How could I
resist him? I loved him. I loved every
broken bone in his crushed body.
I knew Mother would
adore Teddy, so I asked my plaster-man to marry me and in his own funny plaster-man
way, he nodded a slow but definitive yes.
Tuesday, 8 December 2015
Storm in a teacup:memoirs of a tea lady. Chapter 13
Chapter 13.
Mother kept to her bed while I continued to work as a tea
lady. I was beginning to become quite
skilled at serving tea. In each hand, I
could now carry three cups of tea on saucers.
As a special party trick I could even balance a teacup, filled with tea,
on my head! Things were looking up.
People were no longer asking after my mother. Buoyed by my success I began to juggle
teacups and plates into the air. I
entertained thoughts of going into show business. But in the dead of night, away from the limelight,
the voice of commonsense spoke to me, “pack it in.”
So I
packed away my dreams.
I
focused on my career as a tea lady.
But in a spirit of defiance I became a closet
crockery juggler, and a pretty good one, if I do say so myself.
Thursday, 8 October 2015
Storm in a teacup:memoirs of a tea lady. Chapter 12
Chapter 12.
Although my predicament was frightening, I was determined to
prove to the world that despite my tender years, I could be an accomplished tea
lady.
My first gig was fast approaching
—the Wattlebird Ornithological Society’s Annual General Meeting at the Town
Hall—at which a new president, secretary, treasurer and committee was to be
elected.
Mother, still in her bed, sheltered
by a mountain of bedding and books, chirped, “Take birdseed.”
“Birdseed?” I squawked.
Mother craned her head upward as if
to say, “You’ll find out why.”
So I packed a bag of birdseed onto
the tea trolley and the scones I’d baked that morning and made my way to the
town hall where the raucous sound of birds greeted me.
The president, secretary,
treasurer, committee and members of the Wattlebird Ornithological Society were
a curious lot, for they all bore a striking resemblance to birds of one kind or
another. On seeing me they all took flight and perched themselves onto chairs,
and commence whooping, warbling, twittering, as they presumably elected office bearers.
The
president, who looked like a kookaburra, laughed uproariously throughout the
meeting. I swear I even saw bird feathers on the floor as I doled out cups of
tea and scones. But it was when I scattered some birdseed onto a table that
things quickly got out-of-hand, as suddenly the many decent law-biding citizens
of Wattlebird began to peck at it.
That
night as I sat next to my mother, who was nestled in her warm bed, I recounted my
debut in minute detail to her. Mother listened attentively , nodding slightly
before giving what I believe to be, a small hooting sound, like that of an owl.
Afterwards,
much later that night, I studied my image in the bathroom mirror, concerned
that I might be turning into a bird, (an owl), as opposed to being a tea lady.
I saw nothing. No beak, no feathers, and I certainly didn’t have a bird’s eye
view or possess wisdom. I flapped my
arms in an attempt to fly. Nothing. I scattered birdseed onto the kitchen table
but the urge to peck at it eluded me. My
research proved beyond any reasonable doubt that I was not a bird. No, I was a
tea lady.
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