Chris Holmes, an immigration officer for Border Force at Stansted
Airport, handed in his resignation yesterday on a cake, beautifully
piped in neat black letters on a flawless page of white royal icing.
"The
writing was quite fiddly," he says (he had practised on a sheet of
paper). "I would have done it a bit neater if I'd known it was going to
go viral."
Addressing his letter "To The Management", Holmes writes in upright and looping script:
"Having
recently become a father I now realise how precious life is and how
important it is to spend my time doing something that makes me, and
other people, happy. For that reason, I hereby give notice of my
resignation, in order that I may devote my time and energy to my family,
and my cake business."
Holmes, 31, who lives in Sawston,
Cambridgeshire, is otherwise known as Mr Cake, in the baking business
that he has been building up in his spare time over the past two or
three years. He arrived for his day job at Stansted on Monday with his
large rectangular passion cake in a box - "a spiced carrot cake with
pecans and sultanas and coconut" - and a resignation letter, and handed
over both at once to the duty manager sitting on the podium behind the
immigration desks.
The manager and his colleagues "were surprised
and amazed", Holmes says. "But they took it very well. It was a huge
cake. Ten by 12 inches, with about 18 eggs in it." He made it in two
parts, splicing them together with orange icing. "The people who tasted
it say it was very nice," said Toby Allanson, a spokesman for Border
Force.
Holmes, who became a father five weeks ago when his son,
Benjamin, was born, came up with the plan to bake a resignation cake six
months ago, when his wife was still pregnant.
He told no one
about his idea, but kept it in his head, quietly thinking it over,
cooking it through, until it too had reached its full term.
"Timing-wise, it's quite a risk [to launch a business] with the economy
as it is at the moment. But I have looked at the books time and again
and every way I look at it, it is viable as a sole employment." He chose
a passion cake, he says, because "it was quite an appropriate choice,
given I was following my passion.
If it all goes to plan, Ben is
to thank for giving me that kick to get on and do something I have a
passion for." He will be repaid with a wonderful first birthday cake,
already in the planning.
Holmes's phone has been ringing and
emails pinging all day, he says. But so far there have been no requests
for resignation cakes. At his former employer's office, meanwhile, there
is still some cake left. "He leaves with our very best wishes," says
the assistant director of Border Force at Stansted.
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