Often, we only come to truly value someone when they're no longer there to remind us of their presence.
When a small, perfectly frosted cake arrives unannounced on Harold Pimm’s doorstep, the reclusive baker suspects sabotage from his rival, Penny Crumb, sparking a frantic quest for answers. His cat Muffin’s messy intervention only fuels his paranoia, leading him to confront Penny at her bakery, where a delivery driver, Reggie, confesses to misdropping the cake due to a GPS glitch. The trio’s attempt to replace it for a wedding spirals into disaster—éclairs fly, the cake splatters, and Harold lands face-first in the wreckage as Penny spins it as “avant-garde” art. Back at the bakery, accusations give way to revelation: the cake was a peace offering from Harold’s estranged sister, Clara, its label lost in transit. Laughter replaces blame, and they craft a new cake, reuniting with Clara for tea and tales—until the wedding’s furious mother, Gloria, crashes in, only to slip into the truce. Amid crumbs and camaraderie, Harold reflects that life’s chaos, like a mischievous morsel, might just be the ingredient that binds us together.
Set against the kaleidoscopic backdrop of 1960s London, Broken Dreams tells the intimate story of Andee Spencer—quiet, perceptive, and misunderstood—whose internal rebellion grows in the shadow of a volatile, ambitious family. Through richly drawn snapshots of childhood whimsy, shifting sibling alliances, and the quiet ache of exclusion, we follow Andee from her early days as an imaginative loner enchanted by a sunflower named Little Wee to her pivotal stand in a brutal family boardroom coup. As her siblings vie for power in the family business, Andee’s true struggle unfolds within: a search for meaning, justice, and selfhood in a world that rewards charm over integrity. Ruby thrives on control. Ethan plots a quiet revolution. Matthew watches, weary. Mary emerges from the sidelines. And amid it all, Andee listens—until the moment comes when she must finally speak. Woven with political tremors—the assassinations of the Kennedys, the rise of spiritual countercultures, and the fading echoes of empire—this is a story not of loud rebellion but of whispered resistance. Of the courage it takes to say no. To sit still in a storm. And to find one’s place not by playing a part, but by refusing to. Broken Dreams is a layered, emotionally resonant exploration of identity, power, and the quiet strength of the unseen
Everyone feels bored if we say we are going out with parents and children feel that parents are little older to hang out and we cannot talk any enjoyable thing. Once in Pune parents were very active and enjoyable persons, they were packing their bags then they said children we are going out for outing if you want to join us then you can come with us. Then children were shocked and excited to come with their parents. Children said we thought you will say no road trips with children but you are very cool than we all thought. Then they plan road trip to Ladakh and see all the Buddhist temples there and do ride on the yak animal. Then they start climbing the mountains and enjoy the trekking. After that when they come back to their room sit outside and start talking to each other. Then one of them let’s play singing movie songs in 2 teams and the team that wins will get a big chocolate hamper. Then they all play this game and the first team wins this game, the chocolate hamper. The Ladakh trip was awesome and more enjoyable than ever thought and parents said never think and we are old and cannot enjoy like you we can but we never show it you. Children say ok we admit it that you are young and we just thought you may get tired to go out and you have to travel so much that’s why The parents gave gifts, and talked to their children like their friends and never bored them. Children said we will like to always go with our parents.