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More Than Just Tea

Steeping connection, compassion, and community.

ABOUT MY CUP OF TEA

My Cup of Tea is a non-profit, social enterprise located in the heart of Orange Mound, considered the oldest African American community in America. We import the highest quality tea from tea estates and gardens in the Far East to The House at Orange Mound, where it is weighed, re-formatted, and packaged for sale by women who impact the historic neighborhood.

Their lives are stabilized and dignified through training and purposeful work. Resources for personal and professional growth are included daily to enable them to provide for their families and serve their community.

Your purchase online or at one of our local retailers opens a pathway for positive change, upward mobility, and pride for the courageous women who prepare our tea. You can also directly donate to My Cup of Tea. 

What Customers Are Saying:

★★★★★
"So glad I took the time and found the time to drive over there. Lovely, lovely lovely."
Linda G.
★★★★★
"Excellent tea and great location in the orange mound community. The founders Mr. Richard and Mrs. Carey More have created a world class operation benefiting women in the community while proving a high quality tea product."
Dwayne J.
★★★★★
"It's more than a tea shop; it's a teaching facility/family for many women! They sell teas of all kinds and have entrepreneurial classes to empower women to change or enhance their lives. Please visit and patronize."
Dr. R.
★★★★★
"This is a GEM of a place. The staff is nice, friendly and knowledgeable of the product. This need to be you go-to place all things tea."
Keeling A.
★★★★★
"I ordered tea from this shop for the first time. The caramel tea was just what I was looking for. It was just like the tea I bought in Poland."
Susie E.
★★★★★
"Absolutely wonderful organization and outstanding tea. I cannot stop talking about this place to my family and friends. If you are in Memphis this is a must visit. My good friend Cheryl will be there to greet you with a smile."
Valisa G.
★★★★★
"These ladies are passionate about what they do and always eager to please and to share their life journey. And the tea is spectacular! I think I've tried most of them, but I'll return often to be sure I don't miss a single one. Right now I'm obsessed with the camomile, so pure it will help you sleep peacefully all night long!"
Melissa K.
★★★★★
"Always a great experience! Plus a great community program. I went for honey sticks and left with 4 packs of those, an infuser, and a mug."
KB M.
★★★★★
"Awesome tea, inspirational ministry that empowers women!"
Rebecca E.
Family is Deep and Wide

Family is Deep and Wide

We often have stimulating guests for lunch, but last week, a friend of mine brought warm insights instead of advice and ideas for change and motivation. 

Aaron Lewis--tall, dark, and handsome--drew immediate attention among our ladies when he entered our hallway.  He was dazzled, as most are, by the elegant décor and the warm friendliness that surpassed his expectations. Supper in the oven and the aroma of chicken and dumplings tempted his appetite and officially erased his next appointment for a business lunch. He complimented the cook for the day, was open for a tour of the House, purchased tea for his mom, and rejoined the women more eager than usual to lengthen the lunch hour.

Lewis, with his father and uncle, has weekly mentored a misunderstood slice of society, who are incarcerated, with few visitors and fewer plans for redemption. The Lewis men have entered the “Inside Circle” and for three years they have been approved for ministry in weekly sessions among willing inmates at  201 Poplar.  After perfunctory scanning, frisking, and pictures, they proceed to the part of the jail where the public is barred and the conditions are brutal. They sit in a large room with armed guards in an open forum among men awaiting trial and open to a respite from their cells. 

The Lewis men, model the male leadership, kindness, and mercy that have been missing in our community and many others over the last several generations.  Roughly 70-80% of incarcerated men, according to the Prison Policy Initiative, have been fatherless children.

                Incarceration, unfortunately, is not an uncommon experience for our crew of ladies at The House.  Many of them have served time, visited family in prison, or both. Therefore, familiar, far more than I, the ladies asked good questions, which he welcomed. They wanted more information as to success, recidivism, and dangers. He shared the statistics and held them spellbound, believing and admiring. Then he winsomely requested to ask a question.

                  His query, “Would you tell me something that makes you happy,” landed on the heart of each lady.  There was none unwilling to speak, and some often noted for little to say, gave us much.  We were past the time for quitting, but all remained at the table to speak her turn.

Summarily, though expressed with many colorful examples and reasons, the response was “My family makes me happy.”

That surprised me and was not my personal response to his question when my turn at the table arrived.

Though ‘family ‘is core and constant across every generation and location since the dawn of time, the ways my family is shaped by inherited dependence and identity don’t align with the pattern shared among our ladies at My Cup of Tea.

I watch it here with respect and am reminded of the stories of my grandmothers who were widows after WW II and tended to and were assisted by my parents who lived nearby them and helped with the family work.  Time marked in decades has redefined the role of family in my own experience as well as among my peers.

Within Orange Mound and other demographically similar communities, ‘Family’ is kinship-based, and though defined loosely, the primary pillar of security.  It is fluid, resilient, and elastic in the network.  It includes blood relatives, half-siblings, “play-cousins”, neighbors, baby mommas, baby daddies, their children from other relationships, and many aunties. There is a loyalty to all, a turn of the cheek, and forgiveness for almost anything in time.

  Many referred to as “Cuz” are expected to provide, when asked,  a safety net for survival through the ubiquitous dips in life including: bail money, childcare, emotional support, money for funerals and burials, a safe home away from home, though the porch light is broken, free car mechanics and transportation, and bed side support in the hospital. However, most valued and expected is a code of silence, especially including no cooperation with law enforcements.

Except for the latter just mentioned, many churches in our city accept this responsibility and welcome all of us in need to join their fellowships, become members, and bring their needs into the community of Christ followers.  Debbie and I point to the opportunities around the corner of 3028 Carnes.  I’m told the minimum number of churches within reach are 50, but I haven’t done a manual count. Some have said as many as 150.

With introspection, assurance, and gratitude, I claim my church and fellow believers across the world as my family, my safe house, and my safety net. It is a hospital for the needy.  My sisters and brothers there, though not blood, share God as our Father and our future home.

I am determined to lead others, through God’s irresistible love, to recognize Him as The One Eternal Father, Creator, and Sustainer.  I pray daily that my friends will commit to a church.  There, they will discover a family that does what some blood relatives cannot or fail to do: carry their troubles, share their wisdom, and love them unconditionally as sisters with the one true Father.

The Father never slumbers, never abandons, never rushes, never ignores, while owning and ruling over everything we know or can imagine, He graciously welcomes her in, knows her name, and has a plan and a purpose for her best life imaginable.

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Seed to the Sower, Bread to the Eater

Seed to the Sower, Bread to the Eater

Spring increases my faith every year as I recall and review the promises in Scripture that seeds planted in good soil, watered, tilled, watched, and warmed, will bring forth multiples of fruits and vegetables. 

 Our greenhouse at 3028 Carnes, provided by a friend, has proven reliable as an incubator for seeds we kept over the Winter months.  Within a few weeks, our seeds have grown from embryo to adolescence. The mornings of the past 3 Wednesdays, our ladies have gingerly transported our birthed potentials to our irrigated garden boxes. Corn, tomatoes, okra, lettuce, peppers, sunflowers, zinnias, and more have marooned into new “neighborhoods” disguised as plebian boxes numbered 1 through 10.

Assured that God does the miraculous touch of the seed bursting up and rooting downward, motivates us to do our part in scattering them in our barren fields in Orange Mound. Our soil is a mix of the garden center's common dirt, to which we add composted tea leaves we have conserved for months. Tea leaves are rich in iron and, once decayed, are gold dust for our plants. We use tea to fertilize the soil, and selling the same tea unites our women in something far more important: it gives them exposure to truth and faith in the God of the Bible.

Our mission at The House is more spiritual, less literal, but infinitely more vital. Well beyond the lilting familiar story we often tell customers who stop in to shop and hear “My Cup of Tea moves women in poverty to stability, dignity, and hope,” we eagerly share the less familiar truth: God’s plan of salvation and the miracle of a faith-filled life is the stability and sacred hope all souls are shaped to discover The vegetables will cycle out and the flowers will fade but the seeds of the Word will last forever.

Mentors, guest speakers, and volunteers we call Sisters are the gardeners and leaders of daily devotions, field trips to churches; daily prayer and discipleship are the grace-filled spades, trowels, and shears cultivating the hearts of our employees.

We have employed over one hundred Orange Mound women, most of whom are unchurched, unsaved, untaught, and unsurrendered. The God of the Bible is a stranger, and for many, He is a cosmic kill-joy, a vague “higher power” or a good luck charm. Without the daily exposure to the actual narrative of the Gospels, our women would not have heard that He weeps at a friend’s tomb (John 11:35), washes His disciples’ feet (John 13:5), touches the leper (Mark 1:41), and forgives His own torturers (Luke 23:34).

The prevalent Biblically naïve culture of our community bends toward a myth that if you don’t get caught, it isn’t a sin. If it is legal, there’s no fault or foul.   Many have heeded mixed messages, easily accessed on television, which paint a picture of faith that is simple and comfortable. They promise that faith in following God with a contribution to the messenger will always lead to worldly success.

The heart of one who responds to the one true God steps into a transformation from the inside out.   Like the seed planted in spring soil, which appears to be dead, God brings one to faith in Christ, then a new life as a follower and servant of Him.

I know He is at work, for our beloved ladies are growing in their understanding of who God is and of why we are here: to know Him, serve him, and glorify Him. Any value we add to the lives to whom we minister is temporary, but the mission is eternal.  Born in poverty and living in Orange Mound might be called by the world a dead end. But born again into God’s Kingdom is a plot twist with purpose, a harvest that multiplies, and hope that outgrows every crack in the cold concrete of crippling crisis and concerns.

In Isaiah 55, God makes a remarkable promise:



As the rain and the snow come down from heaven and do not return there but water the earth, making it bring forth and sprout, giving seed to the sower and bread to the eater, so shall my Word be that goes out from my mouth; it shall not return to me empty, but it shall accomplish that which I purpose, and shall succeed in the thing for which I sent it (vv. 10–11).

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Waltzin' in on It

Waltzin' in on It

“Tom told me what his plan was, and I see in a minute it was worth fifteen of mine for style and would make Jim just as free a man as mine would, and maybe get us all killed besides. So, I was satisfied and said we would waltz in on it.”

                                                   -Huck, The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn by Mark Twain

 

Our plan is certainly lacking in the style of Tom Sawyer’s, and it is unlikely to get us killed, but a few weeks ago, our leadership adopted a bold, new strategic plan. And, in the spirit of Huck Finn, we would be ever grateful if you would waltz in on it.

What is not new is the commitment of our board and staff to what has always been the primary purpose of My Cup of Tea–ministry. We have written here many times about the work of God in the lives of the women we serve, the Orange Mound neighborhood, and the entity that is My Cup of Tea. We have been witnesses to changed lives in both subtle and dramatic ways, but nevertheless changed for eternity.

Many of the ladies will tell you that daily prayer with their MCOT sisters is the best part of their day. Sometimes there is nothing physically one can do for another during a crisis, but sisters can always pray. Knowledge of God’s word is becoming “deeper and wider” as we study together every week. Authentic relationships between the ladies and their mentors have sprouted and are nurtured.

If all else fails, this is what we pray works.

You know our other commitment is helping women in the neighborhood escape poverty. Historically, we offer a fair wage job, provide “soft skills” training, financial literacy, a daily meal, and address needs specific to individual ladies. Fundamentally, none of that will change. However, our plan includes more fully equipping the ladies to fruitfully navigate life beyond and apart from My Cup of Tea.

We have celebrated ladies over the years who have used what they learned at MCOT to secure full-time employment. Yet, there has never been an expectation that the ladies would transition out of their roles with us. If they are good employees, we have been happy for them to remain with us for years, and many have.

An early strategic plan from years past envisioned offering full-time opportunities to women working with us and expanding to offer more women a job. While we have grown and expanded in recent years, we are a long way from offering full-time employment at My Cup of Tea. The consequences are that the women working with us today are not rising to their potential, and other women in the community are missing out.

Over the next several months, we will complete the organization and begin the implementation of a workforce development program at MCOT. The effort will require a minimum of one year and up to two years to complete for each woman hired. Besides a part-time job with us, soft skills training, and financial literacy, ladies will learn real-world skills desired by employer partners in the Memphis metro seeking to hire full-time staff. Our intention is to place ladies who are fully screened and prepared to work with partner employers, while also providing back-end support as they begin their new jobs.

God willing, the results will be ladies who are more self-sufficient and able to improve their lives, and the ability for MCOT to serve more women, especially young women leaving high school but lacking an opportunity.

If this revised vision for My Cup of Tea excites you, then this is how you “waltz in on it.”

Prayer – We don’t include it or lead with it out of obligation as a faith-based organization. We include it because we know God answers prayer, and we need it.

Partner as an employer – If you own a business and need to hire staff within the next twelve months, reach out to us for a conversation. We can’t guarantee we can meet your needs, and we won’t ask you to make a commitment to us before we have had a thorough conversation. Email mike.carpenter@shopmycupoftea.com or carey.moore@shopmycupoftea.com.

Join The Blend – The Blend is our sustaining donor program. For a minimum of $10 per month, you help us provide jobs to the ladies while they train for the future. You will receive a monthly digital update and special pricing on our products. The significance of The Blend is that it is predictable revenue, which is so critical to our planning. https://shopmycupoftea.com/pages/the-blend

Become a wholesaler – If you own a retail establishment, we can offer wholesale pricing for resale to your customers. If you frequent a restaurant or retail establishment, ask them to consider stocking our tea. Potential wholesalers can contact Debbie.hert@shopmycupoftea.com or visit our wholesale page: https://shopmycupoftea.com/pages/become-a-wholesaler

We are so thankful for your support, and we are excited to continue this journey with you.

"Commit your work to the Lord, and your plans will be established." Proverbs 16:3

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