In the absence of anything meaningful in her life, Daphne worships her own appearance and social status, defining herself through class, money, and men. When Daphne is forced to move out of her box-sized but chic city centre room, she has to relocate to a cheaper alternative in the not-so-cool outskirts of town. Her new flat sports a fir tree by the window that starts to talk to her. Daphne, who has done everything to escape her own roots, finds herself falling sway to the tree and its powers. This one-woman play is about the destructive obsession with other people’s opinions and materialism, loneliness, and class.