The semester is about to end, and Kitty and her high-school friends have painted themselves into opposite corners of the same room. The past weeks have been full of drama: school drama, relationship drama, and I’m-a-teenager-ok?-drama.
With only a few days of time left together before the big summer break, no one is talking to each other. As Kitty looks around the student cafeteria, she sees everyone pretending to be lost in their phone, sulking to themselves. The real reason? Fear. People are worried: about their future careers, about not seeing their partners for weeks, about what will become of them after high school will soon be over altogether.
Kitty, a born matchmaker, decides to take matters into her own hands. All it takes? A good crisis! Her good friend Yuri is designing clothes for a fashion show. But with only two days to spare, her mentor tells her the styles aren’t good enough. Refusing to let Yuri give up, Kitty rallies their entire friend group together: Q, who has beef with his boyfriend Jin, besties Mihee and Madison, with the former currently feeling abandoned by the latter, even Marius, who’s the reason Q and Jin are fighting.
No matter how they feel about each other, no one wants to let either Yuri or Kitty down, so they all show up, put their heads together, and come up with a completely new fashion line from scratch. Spats flare up here and there, but Kitty helps everyone find their way back together and, in the end, the show is a raging success—not least thanks to Min Ho’s music, who happens to be the only person Kitty didn’t invite—since he is her ex and, though she doesn’t like to admit it, Kitty has her own people-problems, too.
Thankfully, Kitty’s oldest friend, Dae, has been paying attention. Having listened to Kitty’s matchmaking advice for years, he secretly invited Min Ho and included him in the group effort. Then, all he has to do is get the two into the same room—and he does.
Over the course of the evening, the inevitable happens: The spirit of kindness and harmony catches on, and, like everyone else, Kitty and Min Ho make up. Not quite the way he expected it would go, but they leave the building on much better terms than they entered it, which makes both Dae and the rest of their friends smile.
It’s always hardest to apply your skills yourself. When does a great baker ever make a cake purely for herself? Someone who negotiates for a living might make a terrible deal on buying a car. And the calming voice of reason in a friend group may still snap at her husband after a long day of counseling for others.
Sometimes, the matchmaker needs to be match-made. But often, we can help it before we need help. All it takes is a kind check-in with yourself: Isn’t this what you’re usually good at? Sell yourself a few hours of your own time, and who knows? Maybe your own problems will rectify themselves along with all your friends’.