A.A. Milne's Honey Dipper | |
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Origin |
A.A. Milne (Winnie the Pooh) |
Type |
Honey Dipper |
Effects |
Makes the consumer happier and more active |
Downsides |
Gives them cravings for honey where their body will shut down if don't get any |
Activation |
Children eating honey from the dipper |
Collected by |
Felix, Rick and Aden |
Section |
|
Date of Collection |
2014 |
[Source] |
Origin[]
Alan Alexander Milne was an English author, best known for his books about the teddy bear Winnie-the-Pooh and for various children's poems. Milne was a noted writer, primarily as a playwright, before the huge success of Pooh overshadowed all his previous work. Contrary to the belief, Milne did not only get inspiration from his son, Christopher Robin Milne, but also this dipper his son played with along with his teddy bear: Winnie the Pooh.
Effects[]
The dipper acts as a dowsing rod for children in need of comfort, and whenever honey that has touched the dipper is ingested, the consumer's endorphins will fire off, making them happier and more active. Unfortunately, it also makes them absolutely ravenous for honey, and they won't stop eating it until their body shuts down.
Collection[]
When it was reported that children in New York were suffering with gastric problems that were proving to worsen, Warehouse Agents were quick to come on the scene. Investigations confirmed that all the children but one were in the upper class, and sick within a week prior to the gastrointestinal symptoms appearing. It turned out the mother of the child from the lower-class family had been hired as a caretaker for the sick children of the rich families, and quite innocently had used A.A. Milne's Honey Dipper, which she had picked up somewhere along the line, to spread the sweetener on the children's food, including her own child when he came down with a cold. It was then later moved to the Disney Vault.
It was part of the artifact cache retrived from a mission at Disneyland and is now stored in the Disney Vault sector of the Warehouse.