Check out my recent interview with Blerta Meta about 'The Happiness Of Many Lives' in the link below
Are we connected to others who have gone before us, to those who have stood in the same spaces or felt the same feelings?
Can those who don’t find resolution and acceptance in their time and place find it in someone else’s?
Can it take many lifetimes to resolve a life? Or, can it take just one lifetime to resolve the conflicts of many lives?
Johnny, a struggling young man who faces his mental instability with defiance and humor, starts a journal to document his obsessive and jealous rages as a part of his court-ordered therapy.
Amira, an ostracized villager in 19th century Ethiopia, struggles to raise her son alone as she begins to see the Devil around her and believe that her son is the new Christ.
On the Silk Road in China in 1412, eunuch slave boy Wang Xiao Xiao remembers little of his home until a stranger joins the trade caravan causing Wang's past to return, meaning that his life will never be the same again.
Eric, a young boy in 16th-century England, lives in poverty with his story-telling mother. When his mother sickens with the small pox and undergoes the red treatment, Eric seeks solace in the church and a statue of the Virgin Mary, placing all his hopes in Her for their redemption.
In 1794 Hawaii, Kalani's prophetic childhood vision causes him to be chosen as an apprentice by the village's Kahuna. As he learns more of the sacred ways of his people, he begins to question his place in his world, especially when European sailors arrive.
As Johnny’s life spirals increasingly out of control, he decides to take a brash and drastic approach to resolving his own life struggles, and maybe even the struggles of those who have gone before.