Theme: Making Friends and Maintaining Friendships
December 11, 2025 – 14 days to Christmas
Today’s Story: The Plum Pudding Rebellion
Isabelle sat in her car outside the Agen Christmas market, watching people buy things they didn’t need with money they hadn’t earned yet. Her phone buzzed. Her mother. Again. Seventh call this week.
She let it go to voicemail, already knowing what it would say: “Have you talked to your boss about that promotion yet? Your cousin just got promoted. Again. Call me back.”
Her boss didn’t exist anymore. Neither did her job. “Restructuring due to budgetary constraints”—twenty-eight years of public sector employment, gone in one meeting and a severance package that wouldn’t last through January.
She’d told no one. Not her mother, not her sister, definitely not her cousin.
Her phone buzzed again. Text this time. Agnès.
Stop hiding in your car. We can see you from the stall. Come and help us, or we’re coming to get you and it will be seriously embarrassing for everyone.
Isabelle looked up. Across the market square, Agnès, brandishing a wooden spoon dripping with batter, was waving enthusiastically.
She scrambled out of the car.
Golden lights shimmered across the square as the smell of gingerbread, pine needles, and sizzling duck fat curled through the air. Vendors shouted cheerful greetings over a soundtrack of brass bands and upbeat Noël classics. Stalls draped in garlands offered heaps of woollen mittens, hand-carved wooden toys, delicate hand-blown glass ornaments and velvety scarves. A group of children rushed past her, leaving a trail of giggles behind them.
Agnès and Thomas’s stall was organised chaos barely contained by wooden crates: jars of preserved plums, bottles of prune liqueur, and a mountain of what looked like small, dark cannonballs wrapped in cheesecloth.
“Plum puddings,” Agnès announced, thrusting one into Isabelle’s hands. It was surprisingly heavy. “Traditional English Christmas pudding, but made with Agen prunes instead of raisins. Revolutionary. Also, possibly illegal—we haven’t checked.”
“Why would it be illegal?” Isabelle asked.
“Everything fun is illegal,” Thomas said philosophically. He was tall, bearded, wearing an apron that said “Agriculteur et Fier“—farmer and proud. “Also, we’re threatening the bûche de Noël monopoly. People take their Christmas desserts very seriously here. We’ve had threats.”
“Threats?”
“Mostly passive-aggressive. One woman told Agnès our puddings looked like ‘something from the compost heap.’ Another said we were ‘betraying French Christmas traditions.’ Very dramatic. We consider it free publicity.”
Agnès grabbed Isabelle’s arm. “Thanks for offering to help us today. We have forty puddings to sell, three more markets to do, and Thomas pulled his back lifting a crate this morning like an idiot.”
“I’m not an idiot, I’m old—”
“You’re fifty-two, pas plus. Isabelle, you’re in charge of sales, organisation, and preventing Thomas from arguing with customers about the cultural superiority of pudding over bûche.”
“I don’t know anything about selling—”
“You managed an entire department of public servants who didn’t want to be managed. This is easier. These puddings actually want to be sold.”
Before Isabelle could protest further, a customer appeared—an elderly woman, sceptical expression, the look of someone who’d been eating bûche de Noël since the invention of Christmas.
“What,” she said, “is this?”
Isabelle panicked. Looked at Agnès. Back at the woman. At the pudding in her hands.
“It’s a plum pudding,” she heard herself say. “A traditional English Christmas dessert, made with local Agen prunes. All ingredients from within fifty kilometres. Soaked in Armagnac. Takes three months to mature properly. You steam it on Christmas Day, serve it with brandy butter or crème anglaise.”
The woman’s eyebrows rose. “Steam it? Like vegetables?”
“Like tradition. This recipe is older than the Republic. Older than Napoleon. Probably older than this market.” Isabelle was making things up now, but it felt good. “You can’t buy this in a supermarket. It’s made by two people who left sensible jobs to make something real with their hands instead of pushing papers around desks.”
The woman bought three.
After she left, Agnès stared at Isabelle. “Where did that come from?”
“I have no idea. I think I’m having a breakdown.”
“Have a few more while we sell out. You’re a natural.”
By the third market, in a town called Nérac, where fairy lights swung between bare plane trees, they’d developed a system. Isabelle handled customers with the organisational precision of someone who’d spent eighteen years managing bureaucratic chaos. Thomas managed the inventory. Agnès handled production crises and periodic announcements like “we’re out of brandy butter” or “someone just asked if the puddings are vegan, and I may have laughed.”
During a lull, Thomas handed Isabelle a bowl and a large wooden spoon. “New batch. Help me to mix it?”
The bowl contained what looked like the combined contents of a fruit shop and a liquor store: chopped prunes, candied orange peel, almonds, flour, butter, eggs, and enough Armagnac to sterilise surgical equipment.
“Just mix,” Thomas said. “Fold it together. Don’t overthink.”
Isabelle plunged her spoon in. The mixture was thick, sticky, and smelled like Armagnac-soaked fruit and butter and something darkly spiced she couldn’t identify.
“Nutmeg,” Agnès said, appearing beside her. “And cinnamon. The secret ingredient though is cardamom. Don’t tell anyone, or we’ll have to kill you.”
They mixed in companionable silence—Isabelle’s spoon working the pudding mixture while Thomas added ingredients and Agnès wrapped finished puddings in cheesecloth with the efficiency of someone who’d done this a thousand times.
“What’s up, Izzy?” Agnès said eventually.
“I got laid off,” Isabelle said. The words came out easily, surprisingly. “Six weeks ago. I haven’t told anyone. I’ve been sitting in my apartment eating cereal and applying for jobs I’m not qualified for.”
Thomas stopped measuring flour. Agnès’s hands stilled.
“Why didn’t you call us?” Thomas asked.
“Because you left five years ago to do this—” Isabelle gestured at the stall, the puddings, their obvious success “—and I stayed. Safe job, predictable pension, slowly dying inside. I thought you’d judge me.”
“Judge you?” Agnès laughed. “Isabelle, we were terrified when we left. Absolutely convinced we’d fail and have to crawl back begging for our old jobs. You know what kept us going?”
“Stubbornness?”
“That too. But also, we knew how to organise. How to plan. How to manage inventory, track expenses, and deal with bureaucracy. All the things we learned in those terrible office jobs.” She squeezed Isabelle’s shoulder. “You have those skills. You’re using them right now. You sold forty puddings using nothing but organisational competence and mild desperation.”
“That’s not a business plan—”
“Of course it is,” Thomas interrupted. “Look at today. You reorganised our stall layout—sales up thirty per cent. You created a customer tracking system using a notebook and a pencil. You convinced a woman who called our puddings ‘compost’ to buy three of them. These are marketable skills.”
Isabelle looked at her hands, still covered in pudding mixture. At the stall they’d somehow made more efficient. At the empty crates that had been full this morning.
“I don’t know what I’d sell,” she said.
“Doesn’t matter yet,” Agnès said. “First, you help us through the Christmas season. Second, we teach you everything we know about small businesses. Third, you figure out what you want to make or do or sell. Fourth, we help you do it. This is the plan.”
“That’s not a very well-planned plan.”
“It worked just fine for us.” Thomas handed her a finished pudding. “Et voilà. First one of the new batch. Take it home. Make it for Christmas.”
On Christmas Eve, the steaming pudding filled Isabelle’s apartment with a luxurious haze of fat, juicy, sun-kissed plums, lifted by zany orange zest and notes of cinnamon, nutmeg, and clove, enriched by a generous soaking of 10-year-old Armagnac. The first bite was rich, dense, and deeply comforting—molasses, tender fruit, toasted nuts, and spice melting together in slow, velvety harmony. It was the kind of flavour that insists you pause, breathe in, and savour.
Isabelle’s phone buzzed insistently. Agnès.
Boxing Day market. 6 AM. Bring coffee and your organisational brain. We’re teaching you pricing strategy and you’re teaching us how to file taxes properly. Partnership?
Isabelle typed back: Bien entendu. Partnership.
Outside, church bells rang. Inside, a woman who’d spent twenty-eight years behind a desk slowly savoured the most marvellous Christmas pudding she had ever tasted and thought about what her loss of safety had bought her: the strange discovery that sometimes losing everything means finding more than you ever dreamed of having.
The Making Friends and Maintaining Friendships Masterplan
Laughter is one of the quickest ways to strengthen friendships. In the midst of life’s challenges, a shared joke or a moment of silliness can lighten the load and bring you closer to your friends.
This holiday season, let laughter be your gift. Seek out moments of joy, whether it’s through funny holiday movies, playful traditions, or simply sharing a funny memory with a friend.
| When you lose your job-tied identity, reach out to friends who’ve successfully reinvented themselves—and actually accept their help. Let them put you to work. Learn their business. Translate your “useless” skills into new contexts. Be willing to get your hands dirty (literally, with pudding mixture) doing something completely different from what you did before. Worst case scenario: You spend a few weeks helping friends with their business, learn some new skills, and go back to traditional job hunting with better stories and references. Best case scenario: You discover that all those “boring” administrative skills—organisation, planning, attention to detail, managing difficult people—are actually the foundation of entrepreneurship. Your friends become mentors who show you that reinvention isn’t about having a brilliant idea, it’s about having the courage to try something and the skills to make it work. You end up with a business partnership, your mother’s investment, and the realisation that the job that defined you for eighteen years was actually just training for what comes next. You learn that sometimes losing everything means you finally have space to build something that’s actually yours, and that the best business plan starts with friends who refuse to let you eat cereal alone in your apartment when they know you’re capable of so much more. |
What Christmas memory always makes you laugh? How can you recreate or celebrate that joy this season?
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–How well do you know your Friends? Quiz
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I put the essence of who I am, and everything I have experienced that makes me who I am, with great enthusiasm, into my retreats, courses and books. – Dr Margaretha Montagu (MBChB, MRCGP, NLP master pract (cert,) Transformational Life Coach (dip,) Life Story Coach (cert) Counselling (cert,) Med Hypnotherapy (dip) and EAGALA (cert)

#christmascountdown #friends #friendsforever #friendsforlife #friendship #friendshipquotes


What one needs is optimism and confidence. Sometimes friends give these things with grace. 😄
Your story was a good start of this morning. The meaning of friendship and courage to restart your life with help of friends. Sometimes you need a friend to push you into another direction, one you never thought of before.
I 100% agree with that, friends can look at a situation objectively, when one gets bogged down in the details.
I love this story. It shows the meaning of true friendship, and that no matter what, life goes on and even bad things that happen, can turn into an even better outcome. And it also brought me closer to being in a Christmas mood. 🙃
Glad you enjoyed it, Andrea!