The passionately critical Hedda has many fears and is not at all well disposed towards her father Harry, a self-help bestseller author. After a long time, he suddenly reappears and persuades her to go on a rather involuntary trip together.
Hedda is in her early thirties and her main occupations are worrying about her ten-year-old son's wheat allergy and denying that she collects unpaid bills in her laundry chest.
Men who confront her with reality are stolen from in revenge.
Her father, Harry, writes self-help bestsellers but absconded years ago when Hedda's mother died. Now he suddenly reappears. While giving Hedda's work colleague an energetic power hug, he opens up to his daughter that he has cancer. His time is foreseeable, and he wants to take one last spiritual journey with her. With a desired destination, which of course he doesn't reveal. Hedda reluctantly agrees, on the condition that he clears out his bank account in Switzerland for her.
In the course of the trip, she discovers that Harry is hoarding a whole army of pills in his breadbox. Actually, his bank account is empty, and a writer's block is scourging him. Then, at an esoteric fair, a heated argument breaks out between Harry and Hedda. It comes out that there is a chance of a cure for Harry, but he believes in a miracle cure instead. Hedda realizes that her father will not change much, but she can change. When they finally arrive at Harry's desired destination, it is the mountain in Switzerland where his mother was buried. Together they make up for the missed farewell ritual, and Hedda has an experience she never thought possible. With a mantra that she always found completely idiotic, Hedda finally gets her father to have the operation.