As a teenager, we all struggle through the path of finding ourselves. Late nights at our lovers' houses, drinking cheap spirits down by the riverside, trying ever-so-hard to destroy those blasted bumps on our chins.
For some, however, it is much harder.
Zakary Peters; the popular boy, you may believe. He was thought to have it all, great friends, a nice house and even the most attractive girlfriend in all of Manchester, England. But as Zak begins to discover himself, thanks to a certain blue-eyed blind boy, he is forced into learning the true art of self-acceptance, the wills of the heart, and has the opportunity to experience the cliché of a teenage romance gone wrong. All of which is hidden amongst his idea of an impractically perfect Hell.
Andrew, a twenty-six-year-old literature graduate, has been through more drama than many his age. From suffering obesity to arthritis, and then anorexia after drastic attempts to lose body fat, Andrew grows more conscious of his body. He shields himself from the rest of the world in a reserved cabin tucked away in a small town where he dwells in solitude and self-pity. But things can't stay the same forever and Andrew's carefully planned out walls fall around him with the arrival of his uncle's fiancee's son, Ethan.
Ethan will more than disrupt Andrew's 'perfect' life. He'll also teach him the sole act of acceptance.