Seven voices. Seven hungers. One truth: what damns us can also define us.
In Sins Like Ours, the seven deadly sins are not monsters or myths. They are people who are fragile, flawed, and painfully human. Each carries a story carved by longing, fear, and the quiet ache of wanting more than life will allow.
Through intimate and haunting reflections, their confessions unfold. Sin is not a punishment but a mirror that reveals where love and weakness meet. These are not tales of evil, but of people who feel too deeply, crave too fiercely, and lose themselves in the pursuit of being enough.
Sins Like Ours is a meditation on desire and redemption. It explores how even our darkest impulses are born from the same place as our hunger for love, belonging, and meaning. It is about the cost of being seen, the silence of being forgotten, and the fragile hope that understanding oneself might lead to forgiveness.