Lewin is in his mid-twenties and drifts through life without motivation or goal. He shuttles from acquaintance couch to acquaintance couch, rattles through endless rows of shelves in a supermarket refrigerated warehouse as an underpaid night watchman, and tries to convince his mother Shannon, who lives abroad, that everything is fine. He spends the rest of his time in a cheap shisha bar where his best friend Merve works. She is his only ray of hope.
When he once again finds himself without a place to live, Lewin has to ask his estranged grandfather Ayman for help and shelter. He offers him a deal. Lewin is allowed to live in the hut in the allotment garden if he helps with the gardening.
Through their time together, a friendly closeness develops with Ayman, which does not only evoke positive feelings in Lewin. Since his first night at the allotment, he has been haunted by nightmares and eerie noises that cause him to increasingly come to terms with his situation. In the seclusion of the allotment garden world, Lewin deals for the first time with the question of who he actually is. He gradually discovers how damaged his family is by its traumatic past and how much it weighs on him as well. If he wants to finally start on his future, he has to confront this past.