January 6, 2025
Sunlight beamed through the tall windows of Cosmic Rabbits Tea Company on the second-last day of the year. A man sat at a front table, silhouetted in the light behind him. Three young women and a little girl were at a table nearby, the women sipping their tea.
It was strangely warm, mid-60s, the shop door was open to the street. At the counter someone chatted with Tracy, who has run the place since she and her daughter Allie opened it on McBee Street eight years ago. Tracy says the name is a connection to the local Swamp Rabbit Trail, the asphalt path that extends 20 miles from downtown Greenville to Traveler’s Rest. “Cosmic” is tacked on, I take it, for the sake of off beat originality.
Their idea is that “tea fixes everything.” So, seven days a week folks drift in for a cup or two. Nearly all stay an hour or more.

Half the room is a curiosity shop offering exotic teas from various places, high-end knick-knacks, elaborately painted teacups, mugs, teapots and pitchers, kitchen decoratives, and so on. Walls are arranged with original paintings of landscapes and wildlife, along with old newspaper frontpages like “Man Walks on the Moon,” and a NASA logo.
A collection of non-working clocks, all showing different times, covers part of one wall. A shelf stocked with books and board games is set in back, next to two loveseats. You can sit and stretch your legs and page through old history texts. I didn’t see any magazines, no old LIFE or Time, or National Geographic, or People, which would suggest a doctor’s office and the impatience and irritability that go with it.
The place was quiet, as we guessed it is nearly always. Drinking tea is a quiet activity, whether it’s the black, high-caffeine yerba mate, oolong, formosa mango, almond moon cake green, zero-caffeine rooibos, or any of dozens of others. There’s no food. You show up, you drink tea. You sip and if you’re inclined, ponder the direction of your life.
The shop does have a website, featuring a quote from children’s author Aprilynne Pike: “As far as her mom was concerned, tea fixed everything. Have a cold? Have some tea. Broken bones? There’s a tea for that, too. Somewhere in her mother’s pantry was a box of tea that said, ‘In case of Armageddon, steep three to five minutes.’”

Tea is associated with good manners, gentility, serenity. We may borrow that notion from old British melodrama Those may be qualities we wish we saw more of in ourselves or in others. Or not.
We may drink tea because it doesn’t have the caffeine kick of regular coffee. I’ve read that one eight-ounce cup of coffee contains 96 milligrams of caffeine. The same size cup of black tea gives you only 47 mg, and green tea just 28 mg. We may drink it because we’ve read that tea can provide health benefits, like anti-oxidants, which lower cholesterol.
You can get tea at Starbucks, but Starbucks isn’t about tea. You can’t get coffee at Cosmic Rabbits.
We were in no hurry. We walked in and looked around. Tracy was brewing a cup for a takeout customer. The guy by the window was reading a book. We browsed the displays of tea-related stuff and glanced at the oddities on the walls.
It was a slow point in a slow business week. I guessed business is better at breakfast? Cosmic Rabbits doesn’t open until noon, 1:00 PM on Sundays. Somehow Tracy and Allie make it work.
We sprawled on one of the loveseats. The late December sunlight filled the room. Pedestrians strolled by outside. The three women talked quietly. I sipped my tea. Fifteen minutes passed, then twenty, then thirty. My 16-ounce cup was still half-full. The tea was hot, then warm, on this warm South Carolina day.

As I stretched my legs toward the sunlight, the year came back, the visits to friends and family, the goodness of the holidays. I recalled the New Hampshire forests, the rugged mountains of Northern Virginia, East Tennessee, and Western North Carolina, the warm sunlight of Hawaii, the scrub plains of South Texas, the chaos of Nashville.
Cosmic Rabbits is a kind of piazza, an urban refuge where life’s stresses and strains can be dismissed for a little while. We’re not in Paris or Rome or New York, where busy cosmopolitans will stop to drink, talk, laugh, dwell on the meaning of their lives, and dream great dreams. But in this inconspicuous city in the northwestern corner of a small Southern state, we can settle in at this quiet side street shop and think those same thoughts and dream those same dreams.
I thought of our adventures, trooping in the van around the country. Then too—it was unavoidable–of the sadness of loss, the trauma of illness of family and friends, of the opaqueness of the future. Then calls not made, letters not written, the rush of days, weeks, months that appear then disappear, obligations not met, promises not kept.
I stared at the lifesize cutouts of Princess Leia and a Storm Trooper near Tracy’s brewing station. Cosmic Rabbit somehow reminds us that much of life is about imagining, finding beauty in the real world, making dreams come true, finding the good we can find around us. Family and friends are doing things we’ve never done. The grandsons are widening their horizons.
The serenity of the moment may be exaggerated by the seasoning in the tea, but still may carry us through winter. Somehow we don’t stay with the doubts. We can look ahead and find a promise of hope. Maybe there’s a tea for that.






