The Christmas Party Fund

I stared at the charge on my monthly payslip, feeling a familiar knot tighten in my chest. A hundred and twenty dollars. For the annual office Christmas party. The one I had zero intention of attending.

It wasn’t that I was anti-social, exactly. I just found forced merriment under fluorescent lights to be the definition of miserable. Plus, I had other plans that Friday night, plans that didn’t involve awkward small talk and lukewarm eggnog.

My name is Arthur, and I work in accounts at a mid-sized marketing firm in Manchester. Itโ€™s a decent job, but sometimes the bureaucracy can be maddening. This ยฃ120 deduction, marked simply as “Festive Contribution,” was one of those times.

I marched over to HR, which in our office meant Barry from the third floorโ€”a man whose favorite phrase seemed to be, “It is what it is.” Barry was already wearing a novelty Christmas tie that clashed violently with his usual gray shirt.

“Barry,” I started, trying to keep my tone even. “About the ‘Festive Contribution’ on my slip. I see it’s ยฃ120.”

Barry glanced up from a massive spreadsheet that looked suspiciously like a seating chart. “Ah, yes, the Christmas party fund. Everything in order, Arthur?”

“Well, no, not quite. I won’t be attending the party this year, so I’d like to request that fee be removed, or at least refunded.”

Barry sighed, pushing his glasses up on his nose. The tie jingled slightly. “Arthur, you know the drill. It’s a pooled fund. It covers the venue, the catering, the DJ, the whole shebang.”

“I understand that, but I’m not consuming any of it. I’m not using the venue, I won’t eat the catering, and I certainly won’t be listening to the DJ’s questionable music choices.”

He leaned back in his chair, his expression hardening slightly. “Look, it’s not a ticket, Arthur. It’s a contribution. It’s mandatory team spirit.”

“Mandatory team spirit?” I echoed, the knot in my chest pulling tighter. “Barry, that ยฃ120 is a significant amount for me right now. I’m literally being forced to pay for a dinner I won’t eat and a party I actively don’t want to go to.”

He pursed his lips. “It’s about cohesion. It’s about showing you’re a part of the team. Think of it as an annual membership fee for belonging, if you will.”

“I belong to the team when I do my job, Barry, and I do it well. I’m not paying for a night out that is compulsory in name only. I want my money back.”

Barry just gave me a dismissive wave and a small, irritating smirk that seemed to say, You really think you can beat the system, don’t you?

“The policy is firm, Arthur. The charge stands. Next person, please.”

I stood there for a moment, feeling a surge of frustration and helplessness. It wasn’t just the money; it was the principle. The blatant disregard for individual choice, masked as “team spirit.” I walked away, muttering under my breath, defeated for the moment. I knew I wouldn’t win that battle.

The next day, I was still stewing. I was reviewing some accounts payable, trying to focus on the numbers, but the ยฃ120 kept flashing in my mind like an unpaid invoice. It was a petty thing, perhaps, but it felt like a betrayal.

Suddenly, my inbox pinged. It was an email from Barry. The subject line was simply: Important Announcement Regarding Festive Fund.

My stomach dropped. Had he actually refunded me? No, that was too optimistic. Had he doubled the charge in spite? I froze, clicking the email open with a sinking feeling.

He had sent it to everyone. The entire company. I started reading, dread building with every word.

The email began with the usual corporate pleasantries, thanking everyone for their hard work and dedication throughout the year. Then, it got straight to the point.


Dear Team,

Following an internal review spurred by a query from one of our dedicated employees, we have made a crucial adjustment to the administration of our annual Festive Contribution fund.

The individual in question raised a valid point: while participation in our company celebration is highly encouraged as a means of building team cohesion, forcing a financial contribution from employees who genuinely cannot or choose not to attend does not align with our values of fairness and respect.

Therefore, effective immediately, the ยฃ120 “Festive Contribution” will no longer be mandatory.

For all staff, including those who have already paid, the ยฃ120 will be designated as a voluntary donation to a new initiative: The Local Community Cheer Fund. This fund will be used to purchase essential goods and small gifts for families identified by the Manchester City Council as experiencing financial hardship this Christmas season.

Staff who attend the party and choose to keep their contribution in the fund will be making a direct impact on the lives of local families. Staff who do not wish to attend, or who wish to receive a refund of the ยฃ120 deduction, simply need to reply to this email requesting the refund.

However, we believe this pivot offers a chance for all of us to truly embody the spirit of the season. The cost of the party itself has been absorbed entirely by the company’s operating budget, meaning 100% of the funds contributed will go directly to helping our community. Let us make this yearโ€™s holiday spirit felt not just within our office, but throughout Manchester.

Thank you for your understanding and cooperation.

Best Regards,

Barry, Head of Human Resources


I sat there, completely stunned. Barry. The Smirking Gatekeeper of “Mandatory Team Spirit,” had done a complete one-eighty. Not only was the charge no longer mandatory, but my defiant ยฃ120 had somehow become the catalyst for a company-wide charity drive.

A few minutes later, Barry came over to my desk. He wasn’t smirking now; he looked tired, but also… different.

“Arthur,” he said quietly, leaning down slightly. “I owe you an apology. You were right. It was arbitrary and unfair.”

I just nodded, still processing the email.

“I went home last night and couldn’t shake what you said. ‘Paying for a dinner I won’t eat.’ It made me think about the families in the city who don’t have the luxury of choosing not to eat. I spoke to the CEO first thing this morning, and we agreed. The company could easily afford the party. We were just relying on an old, outdated, and frankly, stingy policy.”

He paused, adjusting his novelty tie. “Thanks, Arthur. You reminded me what Christmas is actually supposed to be about.”

He walked back to his desk, leaving me in silence. I didn’t send an email asking for the refund. I realized that my ยฃ120 had gone from being a bitter, unfair imposition to being a significant act of kindness, without me having to attend a single minute of forced celebration. It felt like I had won the lottery, only the prize was a clear conscience.

Two weeks later, the Friday of the party rolled around. I was home, comfortable on my sofa, watching a film. I felt a pang of curiosity, wondering how the party was going.

Then, my phone buzzed. It was a text message from an unknown number. I opened it and saw a picture.

It was a photo of Barry, my nemesis from HR, in his festive tie. But he wasn’t at the company party. He was standing outside a community centre, surrounded by piles of brightly wrapped gifts and bags of groceries. Standing next to him was a woman, maybe mid-forties, smiling genuinely as she handed a small child a teddy bear.

The caption under the photo read: A massive thank you to the team at [Company Name] for making this Christmas possible for 35 families! Your generosity is astounding.

The text message below the photo was from Barry. It simply said: We raised ยฃ11,880, Arthur. This is what ‘team spirit’ should actually look like.

The biggest surprise, though, was the next photo. It was a selfie of Barry and the woman from the community center. I recognized her instantly, even without the bright smile. She was his wife, Clara. She’d been a volunteer at the centre for years, a fact I’d vaguely heard mentioned but never registered until now.

Barry hadn’t just made a corporate change; he’d brought his personal values, and his wife’s dedication, into the office. He hadn’t been smirking at me out of spite; heโ€™d been hiding a genuine frustration with a system he couldn’t personally changeโ€”until I gave him the catalyst. My initial indignation had been his ticket to doing something truly meaningful, transforming an office party fund into a genuine community lifeline.

The Christmas party went ahead, fully paid for by the company, and I heard it was actually quite enjoyable. But I know that the real party, the one that truly mattered, happened in a small community center on the other side of town. And I realized that sometimes, the most rewarding battles are the ones we fight not for what we get back, but for the change they initiate in the world around us.

I never did ask for that refund. My ยฃ120 had bought something far more valuable than a mediocre dinner: it had purchased a sense of purpose and, unknowingly, helped Barry realize his own.

It taught me that when you stand up for what’s right, even over something as small as an unwanted ยฃ120 deduction, you might just trigger a chain reaction that’s bigger than you could ever imagine. Sometimes, the person who seems to be blocking you is actually the one looking for a way out, and your small push is all it takes to open a door that benefits everyone.

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