Upcoming:
TWENTY-FIVE CENTURIES WITHOUT YOU
This is the story of Sofia - who walks into a museum and falls in love with a statue. Day after day, her grueling sentiment grows that she knows him, albeit he died 25 centuries before she was even born. As she follows her heart's seemingly impossible calling, Sofia gradually reconnects with an ancient body of knowledge and a greater sense of Self. Ultimately, she learns that she is not alone and the impossible - through a daring shift in paradigm - can indeed happen.
Traveling to the Story
Writing this book has taken me on a metaphysical adventure as interesting as the story itself which emerged at the end. It all started with some strange images which came to my mind on a cold, dark winter night in the cottage. Ultimately, the ideas prompted me to travel to Greece and find the places where Pasión's story happened once upon a time. I was following a method of intuitive path-finding: ideas which came to me were verified through a series of magical synchronicities.
It was about finding pieces of a puzzle, like an archaeologist would find broken fragments of a bygone reality, to unearth something which happened a long time ago, yet holds an important message for our present and our future.
It was about finding pieces of a puzzle, like an archaeologist would find broken fragments of a bygone reality, to unearth something which happened a long time ago, yet holds an important message for our present and our future.
Once inside the cave - even though I could find nothing published about it - the thought didn't let me go: could there be something hidden in the bowels of the earth? I had to return to Greece a second time, and with no caving or climbing experience whatsoever, try my luck and find out more...
The Tempel of Hephaestos
The temple was inaugurated only a week before Pasión arrived in Athens - sold as a slave. Little did he know at the time that it will still be standing in two and half thousand years for Sofia to see - a woman of the future with whom his consciousness was mysteriously and forever linked. |
‘What would you say' the director asked her 'is your greatest strength?’
My greatest strength is irrelevant, Sofia thought to herself, what matters is the patient.
Yet, she knew she had to reply something, therefore she said:
‘When I am in hell ... I keep going.’