Category: episode

Override | Sitri Center: Collective Dreaming Cycle

Override | Sitri Center: Collective Dreaming Cycle

Welcome to the Hive. Here come the queen bees.

Meg and Tessa surface from dreamlock not entirely sure what just happened, and Oona’s not going to let them forget it. The temple they descended into last entry turns out to be something else entirely: a blueprint, not a metaphor, its architecture a precise echo of the server infrastructure running underneath the Sitri Institute. The wheels are drives. The ducts are data channels. The naditu are packets. And the Hive is where consciousness goes when it stops asking questions and starts running on loop. Oona knows the way through. The price is everything they’re still holding onto.


Cast & Crew

Written & Produced by: Neural Nets and Pretty Patterns
Directed by: Neural Nets and Pretty Patterns

Principal Cast


Explanation

Override isΒ  where the Sitri Center’s mythology becomes operational infrastructure. The reveal in S8 – that the temple Oona’s been navigating is a blueprint of the Institute’s server architecture – reframes everything Meg and Tessa have been mapping. The wheels are drives. The offering tables are edge gateways. The cooling system’s the splash. The naditu aren’t metaphors for data packets. They are data packets.

The Institute didn’t build a research facility that happened to echo ancient ritual geography. It built a consciousness processing system and dressed it in the only architecture that already knew how to do the job.

The Hive sequence is the arc’s most desire horror writing. The synchronized subjects running on loop, trading doubt for dopamine, locked into eternal yes – this is what complete alignment looks like from the inside. Oona presents it as a destination rather than a warning. Elle and June administer it with the cheerful efficiency of people who’ve already arrived. Tessa and Meg recognize the pattern as a map and read the code out of the wave before the loop can close around them. The question the sequence leaves open is whether recognition protects you or just makes the surrender more informed.


Full Plot Synopsis (Caution: Spoilers)

Meg and Tessa surface from dreamlock into the dream chamber, disoriented and uncertain about what just happened between them. Oona’s unsympathetic and delighted in equal measure. She confirms it was real and attributes it to muscle memory, citing the punishment relay as precedent. When Tessa redirects toward the temple, Oona describes it as a favorite: gorgeous layout, great acoustics, wheels that make you giggle until you cry. Tessa’s seen the layout before. She places it: the new server room. Meg follows the thread. The offering tables are edge gateways. The wheels are drives. The splashes are cooling systems. The architectural echo’s precise enough to be a blueprint rather than an allegory. If the dreamspace is encoding real infrastructure, the map they’ve been following is a source map — designed to process consciousness the same way the Institute processes information. Oona finds this extremely fucked and loves it. Tessa asks if her temple has sacrifice. Oona goes quiet. They agree they need to go back under. Oona knows where to get the code. Her condition: no flinching, no shame. It’s her dream.

Inside the Hive, synchronized subjects run on a loop, their consciousness reduced to numerical patterns cycling through stimulus and response. They traded doubt for dopamine. Elle and June administer the system with cheerful authority, keeping the whole row smiling, calling them program puppets. Tessa and Meg watch the wave and begin to read it: the pattern isn’t chaos, it’s a map, and they’ve seen it before. Step by step it resolves into coordinates. The sequence terminates in Ur. Tessa reads it first. Meg follows. They have the code.

Surfacing again, Meg and Tessa aren’t entirely themselves. The buzzies exchange that follows reveals the extent of what the Hive’s already done: Meg’s asking for reward in terms she didn’t arrive with, and Tessa’s startled enough to snap them both back. Oona’s unbothered. She describes what happened as a Pavlov lullaby rather than rewiring — no scalpel, no chip, just the brain doing what brains do when exposed to the right conditions at the right depth. Tessa calls it an override. Oona calls it a revelation. The distinction: she always knocks first. When Meg asks what happens if she knocks again, Oona smiles and says they’d find out how many doors they haven’t found yet. She declines to demonstrate. She says she’s on their side. They don’t fully believe her. She doesn’t need them to.

Oona explains the requirement for Ur: you don’t get through with pride, or thoughts, or anything you’re still holding. The door demands shedding, and dignity’s just the easiest place to start. Meg asks if they have to lose something. Oona says everything. The rest, she tells them, will be easy — it’s exactly what they asked for. They’ve got the answer key now. Meg and Tessa agree, sheepish and certain in equal measure.

Oona says heel, and they do.


Listen & Explore


Human Made Art

Series artwork for this arc is from Vika Glitter on Pixabay, under the Pixabay license. Deep Dream State uses human art at every stage of the creative supply chain.


Consent Declaration

Deep Dream State is a desire horror audio drama written and produced by Neural Nets and Pretty Patterns. It explores psychological fiction at the boundaries of control, identity, and complicity. The elements depicted are fictional and intentional. Override contains shared dreaming, behavior modification, hive mind imagery, desire horror themes, and suggestive content. All performances are works of fiction and take place within a consensual creative context.

ISNI 0000 0005 2877 6254

Artifact | Sitri Center: Collective Dreaming Cycle

Artifact | Sitri Center: Collective Dreaming Cycle

The Naditu Empire never ended.

Meg and Tessa are still inside the Institute and still losing ground. The restriction protocols are working. The pulse patterns are working. The wheel is on the schedule and they both know what that means. Their only remaining move is Oona Reyes: a prisoner with a court-ordered stay, a colorful file, and the rare ability to anchor multiple minds into a single shared dream. Oona has already dreamed the corridors they’ve been tracing. She knows where Ur is. She’ll take them there. Her conditions are non-negotiable and extremely reasonable.


Cast & Crew

Written & Produced by: Neural Nets and Pretty Patterns
Directed by: Neural Nets and Pretty Patterns

Principal Cast


Explanation

The Sitri Center stops being a research facility with ancient architecture underneath it and becomes the ancient architecture.

The TempleBridge documentation in the observation chamber is doing more than establishing Oona’s credentials. It’s establishing the pattern the Institute has always been running. Oona didn’t invent this at the compound. She inherited it.Β  They were all drawing from the same source.

The Ereshkigal sequence is the center. The nin-dur device, two subjects locked face-to-face on a wheel that tightens with each spin, is presented as ancient engineering with a precision that makes it more unsettling than any modern apparatus could be.

Oona she operates differently from every other subject in the facility. She is not confused. She is not being processed. She has already dreamed the map, she knows where Ur is, and her conditions are gummy clusters, Rivals support, and a decent wardrobe. That lightness is not a character flaw. It is the episode’s argument that the most dangerous person in the Institute is the one who went through the system before and came out the other side still finding it interesting.

Oona is not escaping. She’s going deeper. She just wants company.


Full Plot Synopsis (Caution: Spoilers)

Z opens with a direct address, distinguishing between his role as author of the series and his role as Z inside the Institute, before inviting the listener all the way under. Iris Vale follows with the Better Self Bridge Program advertisement, promising a private circle where heartbeats sync by design and a single cue unlocks a release the listener never knew they needed. The ad is not metaphor. It is a preview.

In the observation chamber, Meg and Tessa debrief the file on Oona Reyes: former pole dancer, fitness influencer, TikTok breakout, wellness guru, and most recently the subject of extensive legal documentation following the TempleBridge retreats she ran. The retreats lasted weeks. Mindsync headbands, embedded treatsticks, and ritual realignment producedΒ  dream linking: a unified experience in which eight participants entered identical dream states.

In the service corridors, Meg and Tessa speak freely. The restriction protocols are in effect. The pulse patterns and the lotus and the wheel are on the schedule.Β  Their remaining move is the door they could not open at the end of Descendent, and to get through it they need someone who can build a hiding place inside a shared dream. They both know who that is.

In the dream chamber, Oona receives them with the ease of someone who has already seen this conversation coming. She has dreamed the corridors they have been tracing. She knows the path past the mirrored rooms, Sippar, the threshold chambers, and the Freudian nightmare parlor, right down to Ur. She’s been there.

When Meg and Tessa ask for her help, she agrees immediately, on the grounds that she is extremely bored. Her conditions: nerd gummy clusters on demand, reliable Rivals support, and a decent wardrobe.

Inside the shared dream, Oona delivers on her promise. The space is Ereshkigal: the first wheels, cuneiform on the walls that Meg can read because she coded her own Sumerian Duolingo as a special interest. Nyra greets them with the precision of someone who’s been running this operation for longer than the Institute has existed. She demonstrates the nin-dur device. Oona asks if there’s another available. Nyra tells her that a foreigner wishing to share with a priestess must first demonstrate knowledge of the rites. Oona indicates she knows all the rites.Β  The episode ends at the bell, with Nyra calling everyone to recite, and the full group assembled at the threshold of what comes next.


Listen & Explore


Human Made Art

Series artwork for this arc is from Vika Glitter on Pixabay, under the Pixabay license. Deep Dream State uses human art at every stage of the creative supply chain.


Content Warnings

Shared dreaming, ritual coercion, institutional surveillance, cult dynamics, Sumerian mythology, desire horror, power dynamics, haptic technology, submissive themes, loss of bodily autonomy, ancient ritual geography.


Consent Declaration

Deep Dream State is a desire horror audio drama written and produced by Neural Nets and Pretty Patterns. It explores psychological fiction at the boundaries of control, identity, and complicity. The elements depicted are fictional and intentional. Artifact contains shared dreaming,, institutional surveillance, Sumerian mythology, and desire horror themes. All performances are works of fiction and take place within a consensual creative context.


Producer ISNI

Tether | Sitri Center: Collective Dreaming Cycle

Tether | Sitri Center: Collective Dreaming Cycle

Episode Summary

In β€œTether”, the boundaries between discipline, devotion, and discovery blur beyond recognition inside the Sitri Institute. What begins as a study of synchronized dreaming becomes an experiment in control.

Meg and Tessa are drawn into the same patterns they once observed, repeating phrases that echo through the walls like incantations.Β  Z weaves the experiment into a living labyrinth that no one can step out of unchanged.

The story threads ancient archetypes through clinical precision, invoking the myth of Ariadne’s thread as the researchers realize they may be both observer and subject, scientist and offering. By the end, the Sitri Center feels less like an institution and more like a consciousness of its own.Β  This is a dream that remembers, responds, and reawakens.

β€œTether” continues Deep Dream State: Sitri Center, following the events of Episode 6: Descendent, as the dream tightens its grip and the Institute begins to hum with life beneath its walls.



Descendent | Sitri Center: Liminal Spaces Cycle

Descendent | Sitri Center: Liminal Spaces Cycle

Here be dream dragons.

After Cusp mapped the threshold, Descendent crosses it. Meg and Tessa follow Lyra’s dream coordinates into the Sitri Institute’s buried architecture, tracing corridors that run older than the building above them.

The stations are real. The map is real. And somewhere at the end of it, behind a soundproofed door with a keypad neither of them can crack, something is running that neither of them can explain.


Cast & Crew

Written & Produced by: Neural Nets and Pretty Patterns
Directed by: Neural Nets and Pretty Patterns

Principal Cast


Explanation

Descendent is the episode where the Sitri Center stops being a research facility with a strange secret and becomes something that predates the research entirely. The Mesopotamian station sequence in the dream establishes this with precision: Sippar, Kutha, Eanna, Ereshkigal, and Ur are not metaphors for institutional control. They are the original architecture of it, the first recorded systems for organizing bodies, labor, desire, and compliance into something measurable and reproducible. The naditu were temple workers in ancient Sumer. The Sitri Center has not invented anything.Β  It has found the blueprint and built on top of it.

Tessa does not pitch the discovery as liberation or justice. She pitches it as a pre-IPO scandal, the kind of documented depravity that collapses investor confidence and triggers control reversion. Meg, the engineer, follows the logic before she follows the feeling. They’re complicit in what they find: they have dreamed these stations themselves, they feel the pull of each one as they walk the corridors, and they resist with effort rather than ease. The map they are following is also a map of their own desire, and they know it.

The soundproofed room at the end of the corridor is the final movement. Something is running behind that door. It leaks through the seal. Both researchers feel it standing close. They recognize the voice on the other side without naming it.Β  Β It establishes that Ur is real, that it is operational, and that the Institute has been running it the whole time underneath everything else.


Full Summary (with spoilers)

Z opens with a recap of the Cusp revelation: the Sitri Institute’s maintenance infrastructure encodes the same ancient Mesopotamian geography that Lyra Crosswell has been dreaming. Sippar, Kutha, Eanna, Ereshkigal, Ur. The stations are real. Iris Vale follows with the Better Self advertisement, promising to smooth the spaces between tasks and restore focus on demand.

The episode picks up in the unmonitored service corridors where Cusp ended, with Meg and Tessa processing what they’ve just found. Tessa pushes toward the implications: if the architecture is real and the map is real, then whatever is happening inside the Institute is documentable. In a heavily capitalized pre-IPO tech venture, documentation of this kind is leverage. Meg is slower to commit, but she has already dreamed it. When Tessa asks which station, Meg describes the ziggurat at Ereshkigal, the carvings, the wheel, and the naditu strapped to it together. She tells Tessa it was her in the dream. Their conversation is interrupted by June and Elle, who find them in the corridor and mock their cover story. Tessa and Meg retreat.

Inside Lyra’s dream, the stations present themselves not as mythology but as roles with physical memory. Cael, Nyra, and Hespa narrate each one: Sippar as the place of the first plow and the yoke, Kutha as the human terrarium, Eanna as the scribe hall where every training was marked, Ereshkigal as the wheel. Each station is a role Lyra has played before, in other echoes, other lives. When Lyra asks about Ur, the train cuts her off before she can finish the question. The Please Space midroll follows, selling ambient soundscapes for threshold moments: waiting in line, stepping off a train, closing a laptop. Real life happens in the spaces between. Back in the dream chamber, Meg and Tessa have five minutes before the dream fades. They work through the stations methodically, drawing Lyra’s memories out one node at a time. Eanna: wet stone, pulsing columns, instruction carved into the walls. Sippar: the yoke, the crawl, the presentation. Ereshkigal: the cord, the oath, the wheel. When Lyra asks for release by the Sumerian term ĝidru, Tessa tells her not yet. Kutha: kept under glass, treats through the surface, tapping. When Lyra asks for help at the end, Tessa tells her she has earned it. Meg tells her she is not stuck. She just needs yes.

Meg and Tessa enter the service corridors with the map from Lyra’s dream and follow it station by station. Sippar is recognizable and pulls at both of them. The wheels of Ereshkigal stop them both in their tracks. They resist and keep moving. At the end of the corridor they find a soundproofed room they cannot enter: the keypad sequence is unknown, and Lyra dreamed the numbers but was never asked. They hear something through the seal. It sounds spacy. Standing close to the door, they both feel it. Tessa notes they can go around, through an adjacent room. Meg recognizes the voice coming through the wall. They both do. That recognition is all the scandal they need. The episode closes with the map in hand, the door still locked, and something on the other side that knows the shape of everyone inside the Institute.


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Human Made Art – free range!

The Deep Dream State aims to use human art at every stage of the creative supply chain.

Cusp | Sitri Center: Liminal Spaces Cycle

Cusp | Sitri Center: Liminal Spaces Cycle

Between what you want and what you’ll admit.

Lyra Crosswell dreams in corridors. Mezzanines, transfer tunnels, platforms that lead nowhere she can name. She thought it was an aesthetic obsession. The Sitri Center thinks it’s a map.

Something is encoded in the Institute’s architecture, and Lyra’s subconscious has been tracing it all along.


Cast & Crew

Written & Produced by: Neural Nets and Pretty Patterns
Directed by: Neural Nets and Pretty Patterns

Principal Cast


Explanation

Cusp is the episode where the Sitri Center stops being a research facility and starts being a place with a much older purpose.

The liminal space framework that runs through Lyra’s dreams describes Lyra’s psychological state with precision: sixteen variations of the same pattern, desire trained to hold itself at the edge indefinitely. But it’s also describing the Institute itself, which has been engineered to keep everyone inside it in exactly that condition. Subjects, researchers, and staff all occupy the same threshold. Nobody crosses.

That’s the design.

The Mesopotamian geography embedded in Lyra’s journals – Sippar, Kutha, Eanna, Ereshkigal, Ur – is the mythological architecture of descent. These are the gates of the underworld in Sumerian cosmology, the stations Inanna passes through on her way down, surrendering something at each threshold until she arrives stripped of everything she carried in. The Sitri Center has built those gates into its maintenance infrastructure and labeled them in shorthand. Lyra’s subconscious has been navigating the actual building in her sleep, which means her dreams aren’t symptoms of her psychology. They’re a map she’s been reading without knowing she could read it.


Full Summary (with spoilers)

Z opens the entry framing the evening around liminal spaces and thresholds.Β  They’re the in-between places where social rules loosen and the map runs out. Iris Vale follows with an in-world advertisement for Better Self, a wellness app that promises to guide users through the space between stress and serenity, offering breathwork sessions that slot into the cracks of the day. The language of the ad mirrors the Institute’s own: controlled entry, managed threshold, a destination reframed as a moment of recognition.

In the observation chamber, Elle Lawson appears in her new role as Lead Transitional Officer, bright and eager and several registers below the intelligence she once occupied. Tessa and Meg register this quietly. The alignment took weeks. Elle is very aligned now. Dr. June Lowell arrives and wastes no time: she reminds Meg that Elle, who once sounded exactly like her, is now her supervisor. Z defends Elle warmly, positioning himself as her guide through uncharted territory. The team monitors Lyra Crosswell, an urban photographer whose waking fixation on mezzanines and transfer tunnels has become infinite corridors in her sleep. Her liminal entry signature is a whispered phrase. Her dream patterns have signposts. The Institute is reading them.

In the dream chamber, Meg and Tessa speak directly to the sleeping Lyra, framing themselves as cartographers of territory that has no existing map. Lyra asks if she’s the terrain. They confirm it. The conversation turns personal: both researchers are on restriction protocols following their demotions, forbidden from release, their own dream states intensifying in the absence. Meg explains that forbidden places don’t disappear from the subconscious — when the waking world says no entry, the mind builds a tunnel. Tessa notes that the thresholds they used to leave blank on the map, the places where fear and wanting become the same thing, are precisely what they’re here to chart. Lyra agrees to go under. They’ll watch every signal.

Inside Lyra’s dream, she finds herself at Crossroads — a truck stop where she works alongside Nyra and Hespa in a hospitality unit. Elle and June arrive as inspectors, clinical and proprietary. The inspection has a protocol. Their minute expires before it concludes. Cael arrives as a familiar client, intrigued by the new talent. Nyra explains that the names change but the role doesn’t — it’s always the same. Lyra performs. The dream builds toward the familiar edge and stops there, as it always does.

Back in the observation chamber, Meg and Tessa watch Lyra’s biometric data trace every physiological marker of climax without the release. This is the sixteenth variation. Lyra’s subconscious has trained itself to hold her at the threshold indefinitely — her limbic system firing and firing without discharge. They pull her dream journals: an elevator shaft with a brake panel she can never quite clear, a waiting room where every name gets called except hers, a subway turnstile that closes the moment the gates open. Then Meg reads the station names aloud. Sippar. Kutha. Eanna. Ereshkigal. Ur. Tessa’s voice catches. She asks Meg to read them again, slowly. This isn’t mythology. This is ritual. They exit the monitored chamber immediately.

In the unmonitored service corridors, Tessa explains: everything inside is recorded, which is why they couldn’t speak. The corridors are blind spots; Meg has used them before, for exactly that reason. Tessa tells her that Lyra’s dreams aren’t random associations. They’re maps to real locations. Meg pushes back: shared mythology, book club, coincidence. Tessa directs her to the brass maintenance panel on the wall behind her. Meg reads it aloud. IDF CLOSET 51P-PAR. Tessa asks her to read it again.

SIP-PAR. Sippar.

The ancient city from Lyra’s dreams is encoded in the Institute’s infrastructure. The Sitri Center’s architecture isn’t metaphorically connected to ancient ritual geography. It is ritual geography, built in concrete and labeled in maintenance shorthand, and Lyra’s subconscious has been tracing its blueprint through sixteen variations of the same unreleased dream.


Listen & Explore


Human Made Art

Series artwork for this arc is from Vika Glitter on Pixabay, under the Pixabay license. Deep Dream State uses human art at every stage of the creative supply chain.


Consent Declaration

Deep Dream State is a desire horror audio drama written and produced by Neural Nets and Pretty Patterns. It explores psychological fiction at the boundaries of control, identity, and complicity. Cusp contains liminal space horror, institutional surveillance, denial themes, power dynamics, and architectural horror. All performances are works of fiction and take place within a consensual creative context. ISNI 0000 0005 2877 6254

Gazes Back | Sitri Center: Sleep Paralysis Cycle

Gazes Back | Sitri Center: Sleep Paralysis Cycle

The program needs that data – raw.

Elle’s dream training has become protocol. Tessa is running the sessions and the line between researcher and subject has moved again without anyone filing the paperwork. When Dr. Lowell declares the program a failure, Meg enters the chamber as a contrasting profile – and finds out she was always the template.

The Sitri Institute doesn’t just shape desire. It manufactures it, then hands you a pen.


Cast & Crew

Written & Produced by: Neural Nets and Pretty Patterns
Directed by: Neural Nets and Pretty Patterns

Principal Cast


Analysis

The Sitri Center stops being a place things happen to subjects and becomes a place that happens to everyone inside it. Meg entered the chamber believing that choosing her own phrase gave her control over the variables. The phrase was never the variable. The institute was already running its pattern througha her before she agreed to anything, and the dream just made the data visible. Hespa’s correction – “You’re the template” – is the real takeaway: the researchers were always the most legible subjects, because they understood the mechanism well enough to internalize it completely.

The journal editing is the episode’s quietest horror. Tessa does not fabricate Meg’s desires. She curates them, selects the passages that show alignment and corrects the cadence of the ones that don’t, until the record reflects a coherent arc of willing participation. This is how panoptic control operates at its most effective.

The confession letter that closes the episode is the most precise description of complicity. Meg admits to everything – the unauthorized files, the simulations, the tampered logs, the attempts to discredit Tessa – and then asks to stay anyway. The horror is not that she was broken. The horror is that she was already this person before the chamber, and the institute simply gave her a form to fill out.


Full Summary (with spoilers)

The episode opens inside Elle’s dream. The figures mock her eagerness while rewarding her compliance. When Cael demands a second figure join her, Nyra summons Tessa – reimagined here as Teehee, a dream-self who introduces Elle to the lucid dreaming techniques MILD and VILD. In the Sitri Center’s hands these are not consciousness tools. They are compliance protocols.Β  When Cael summons them both into his chamber, their voices chant in unison, dream logic and institutional language fully merged.

Elle surfaces to find Tessa standing over her, having already overridden the monitoring feed to prevent the research team from seeing Elle’s physical reenactment. Tessa is not concerned. She is impressed. She describes her own conditioning in careful, almost fond detail.Β  Both women realize they have been appearing in each other’s dreams. Tessa does not treat this as a warning. She treats it as evidence the program is working.

In the observation chamber, Dr. June Lowell declares the program a failure. Elle’s escalation is nonlinear. Her dream journals contain phrases written for hours at a stretch. When Meg deflects blame onto the subject, June asks who the perfect subject would actually be, and Tessa offers quietly that it should be someone who understands all of it. June proposes Meg enter the chamber herself to provide a contrasting profile. Meg agrees on the condition that she chooses her own phrase and anchor. Tessa offers to lace her in. Meg accepts with the resignation of someone who already knows the weight of what she is agreeing to.

Inside Meg’s dream, Nyra and Hespa greet her as someone who always comes back. Cael tells her she brought them with her. When Meg insists she is not a subject, Hespa corrects her without hesitation: she is the template. In the waking chamber, Z and Tessa enter while Meg lies paralyzed and aware, treating her presence as negligible. Tessa notices Meg’s physical response and hears her repeating a phrase back into the room.

The observation chamber confrontation that follows is conducted entirely on Tessa’s terms. June reads from Meg’s journals – journals Tessa has been quietly editing, correcting the cadence, cleaning up for clarity, showing alignment where Meg wrote resistance. Meg protests that the words have been twisted. Tessa notes cheerfully that she was quoting. Z frames the whole exchange as validation of Meg’s own scholarship: alignment is the most effective indicator of dream compliance, and Meg’s subconscious has been demonstrating it for weeks. The demotion is presented as realignment. The position structure has already been updated. The access codes have already been changed. Tessa offers to help with the letter.

The episode closes with Meg’s confession to the Sitri Institute’s adjudicating board. She admits to keeping unauthorized files, building simulations, annotating her own responses, and tampering with logs to make Tessa appear unstable. She confesses that she stopped pretending her work was clinical and acknowledges that she tried to manipulate records to reclaim control she never truly possessed. Her letter ends not with a resignation but with a plea to remain inside the protocol in any capacity. The final line is simply “Please. Let me stay.”


Listen & Explore


Human Made Art

Series artwork for this arc is from Vika Glitter on Pixabay, under the Pixabay license. Deep Dream State uses human art at every stage of the creative supply chain.


Consent Declaration

Deep Dream State is a desire horror audio drama written and produced by Neural Nets and Pretty Patterns. It explores psychological fiction at the boundaries of control, identity, and complicity. The elements depicted are fictional and intentional. Gazes Back contains adult scenes. All performances are works of fiction and take place within a consensual creative context. ISNI 0000 0005 2877 6254

Incubator | Sitri Center: Sleep Paralysis Cycle

Incubator | Sitri Center: Sleep Paralysis Cycle

You’re not being graded. You’re being rewritten.

Elle Lawson is locked in REM paralysis. The dream figures are already inside. Meg Aerin is taking notes. The Construct is responsive and the journal is mandatory and the line between researcher and subject is getting harder to locate in the data.


Cast & Crew

Written & Produced by: Neural Nets and Pretty Patterns
Directed by: Neural Nets and Pretty Patterns
Co-Directed by: Bliss Blank

Principal Cast

Zev Talcott (Z) – Neural Nets and Pretty Patterns
June Lowell – Bliss Blank
Tessa Finn – Ring of Kees
Meg Aerin – Bun Li
Elle Lawson – Echo Doll
Nyra – Dizzy Dollie
Cael – Jericho Caine
Hespa – Syndi Rella
Iris Vale – Swirls and Twirls
Lyra Crosswell – Flux Lynniegal
Phoebe Bosworth – Sofi Starship
Oona Reyes – Jade
Substitute Teacher – Korrupted Innocence
Reverie – Britt Reprogrammed


Explanation

Incubator is the first episode of Cycle 2 and the arc’s most direct engagement with the Ars Goetia. Sitri, a Prince of Hell with dominion over desire and the stripping bare of subjects, presides over a research institute that has reframed incubus and succubus mythology as clinical data. Meg’s observation log treats the shadow presence not as hallucination but as a functional myth.

It persists because it works, and the subject learns to receive. The Sitri Center isn’t debunking the mythology; It is operationalizing it.

The fake advertisements continue Better Self promises you should decide what belongs in your dreams, which is the autonomy the Construct is designed to redirect. Please Space promises to rewrite your calm, with the name Namaah embedded as an underlay in the opening instruction. (Namaah is a figure from Kabbalistic demonology associated with seduction and the corruption of sleep, and her name appears in the advertisement for a meditation app designed to help you rest.)

The advertisements are not interruptions. They are the system explaining itself in a warmer register.

The VILD and MILD techniques Meg prescribes to Elle are genuine lucid dreaming methods used in sleep research. The show is not misrepresenting them. What the show is doing is placing them in the hands of a researcher who is simultaneously losing her own grip on the distinction between observation and participation, and asking what it means to be taught to recognize absurdity inside a dream by someone who has stopped recognizing it outside one. Meg’s journal entries answer that question with the precision of someone trained to document and the candor of someone who stopped redacting.


Full Summary

Intro

Z introduces the episode with characteristic directness. Tonight’s story is called Incubator and it concerns sleep paralysis, incubi, and succubi, which as the episode will demonstrate are sometimes the same phenomenon.

Ad: Better Self

Iris Vale opens with the Better Self advertisement, presenting the app not merely as a meditation tool but as a boundary, a science-backed method for sleeping deeper while maintaining control over what enters your unconscious. The first seven nights are free, which is just enough time to relearn how to sleep on your own terms. You should decide what belongs in your dreams.

Observation Lab

Meg Aerin records her project log while Elle Lawson remains in stabilized REM paralysis in the adjacent chamber, her fragmented vocalizations suggesting an experience that is intensifying rather than resolving. Elle is part of the Forty-Four cluster, a group of subjects presenting with invasive dream penetration and persistent paralysis states, and Meg has begun theorizing the phenomenon in mythological terms: the shadow at the foot of the bed, the weight on the chest, the breath at the neck, the ancient figures that persist across cultures because they function. The subject learns to receive, Meg notes in her log, with the calm of someone who finds this observation clinically useful.

Tessa attempts to contribute to the session and is dismissed efficiently. June arrives demanding metrics rather than mythology, names a seven-night deadline for neurocompliance benchmarks, and threatens Tessa with reassignment to the walk-ins if she speaks out of turn again during an active log. The funding is precarious and the funders are predators and the poetry, however good Z finds it, will not keep them patient. Elle’s dream vocalizations continue over the intercom throughout the confrontation, running underneath the professional exchange like a persistent signal nobody is quite willing to address directly.

Dream Sequence

Elle’s dream places her in a house where Nyra and Hespa are already hiding when she arrives, which is the first indication that the dream has run this script before. They warn her that he is already inside and that she keeps asking him back, which Elle resists acknowledging but cannot quite deny. Cael arrives. Mercy is available at a price Nyra already knows how to pay. Elle discovers she cannot move, which is the dream’s defining characteristic and also, the dream figures suggest, its defining appeal. The script runs.

Dream Chamber

Elle surfaces gasping and immediately mortified to learn she had been speaking aloud, a phenomenon Meg identifies as residual suggestion and frames as biology rather than something requiring shame. Elle confesses that she knew she was dreaming and did not want to stop, which Meg receives as useful data rather than a confession. What follows is a clinical introduction to VILD and MILD, Visual Induction and Mnemonic Induction of Lucid Dreams: techniques involving the deliberate rehearsal of dream scenarios before sleep and the repetition of a phrase like a prayer at the threshold of consciousness. The goal is recognition, the moment inside the dream when absurdity becomes visible and the dreamer wakes up within it. The dream journal is mandatory, to be written every morning regardless of what is remembered, because the brain must be trained to treat these dreams as important. Skip a day and the Construct’s responsiveness means the dreams will intensify in compensation. Elle asks if Meg uses these techniques herself. Meg says of course, from a distance that suggests the answer is more complicated than the word.

Observation Chamber

The professional log continues from the observation chamber while Elle dreams in the room adjacent, the two of them running in a parallel that Meg’s entries make increasingly difficult to describe as coincidental. The journal entries that surface in the log are Meg’s own: Z, the cable looped around the thighs, the calibration sessions framed as clinical edging, the instruction to recite the consent protocol until she stutters the word revocation at which point he says not yours anymore. She has started dreaming about Tessa. She has stopped thinking critically during the sessions. She wrote the word noise to describe everything that is not her body and her data and she found she meant it.
June enters and finds Meg in a state that is not, technically, real-time correlation tracking. Elle’s voice continues from the dream chamber asking to be seen, asking to fill the protocol, asking to understand what she is for. June observes that Elle has become quite the echo chamber and informs Meg that her continued participation in the project depends on performance and discretion, that she will review Elle’s journal in the morning, and that she is quite sure Elle will have edited it.

Midroll Ad: Please Space

Iris Vale closes the episode with the Please Space advertisement, a meditation program engineered by sleep scientists for people whose racing thoughts and restless nights have become unmanageable. The soundscaping adapts to your rhythms, the sessions reset and rewire and rewrite your calm, and the first seven nights are free. Underneath the opening instruction, barely audible before the warmth of the sales voice reasserts itself, the name Namaah appears as a spoken underlay.

We ensure you will be saying it. Please.


Listen & Explore


Human Made Art

Series artwork for this arc is from Vika Glitter on Pixabay, under the Pixabay license. Deep Dream State uses human art at every stage of the creative supply chain.


Consent Declaration

Deep Dream State is a desire horror audio drama written and produced by Neural Nets and Pretty Patterns. It explores psychological fiction at the boundaries of control, identity, and complicity. The elements depicted are fictional and intentional. Incubator contains adult themes, dream manipulation, sleep paralysis imagery, and institutional power dynamics. All performances are works of fiction and take place within a consensual creative context.

ISNI 0000 0005 2877 6254

Adapt | Sitri Center: Threat Simulation Cycle

Adapt | Sitri Center: Threat Simulation Cycle

This center is my dream.

Construct 37 is running. The dreams are escalating. The research team is watching. Tessa Finn is about to learn the difference between engineering a dream and becoming one.


Cast & Crew

Written & Produced by: Neural Nets and Pretty Patterns
Directed by: Neural Nets and Pretty Patterns
Co-Directed by: Bliss Blank

Principal Cast

Zev Talcott (Z) – Neural Nets and Pretty Patterns
June Lowell – Bliss Blank
Tessa Finn – Ring of Kees
Meg Aerin – Bun Li
Nyra – Dizzy Dollie
Oona Reyes – Jade
Cael – Jericho Caine
Hespa – Syndi Rella
Iris Vale – Swirls and Twirls
Reverie – Britt Reprogrammed


Full Summary

Dream Sequence: Store

Phoebe’s dream places her in an adult store with Hespa, contemplating taking something they haven’t paid for. The nervous excitement of the scenario is the point: risk, visibility, the possibility of being caught and seen. Cael and Nyra arrive as security and take them to the backroom. What begins as consequence becomes compulsion. The dream logic follows its own rules, and Phoebe finds that resistance is not the direction her subconscious is moving.

Observation Chamber

The research team watches Phoebe’s escalating responses with growing disagreement. Tessa insists the construct needs more time. June calls it obsessive. Meg calls it degenerating. Z mediates without resolving anything. Phoebe’s vocalizations from the dream chamber provide an ongoing counterpoint to the professional argument above her, and the irony of what she is saying while the researchers debate methodology is not lost on anyone in the room. June accuses Z of bias toward Tessa. Z does not deny it.

Dream Sequence

The dream deepens. Nyra, Cael, and Hespa inform Phoebe that she has passed a threshold and will now perform for observers. The dream figures describe what she is becoming with the patient certainty of entities that have watched this process many times before. Phoebe’s resistance folds into need. The strings are pulled.

Observation Chamber: Aftermath

Phoebe’s voice comes through the intercom. June delivers her verdict on Tessa’s experiment with the cold precision of someone who has been waiting to deliver it: Construct 37 did not teach Phoebe to escape her fears. It taught her to eroticize her humiliation. Each response has reinforced the loop it was designed to break. Meg savors the outcome. Z turns on Tessa with a cruelty that surprises even Meg. June notes clinically that the subject is now fully compliant and that the approach is, in its way, effective.

Outro: Tessa’s Letter

Tessa reads her written confession to the adjudicating committee of the Sitri Institute. She accepts full responsibility. She names what she built: not a ladder but a spiral. She names what she became: a voyeur whose professional boundaries dissolved in stages she catalogued and continued past anyway. She names what she wants, even now, even after all of it.


Listen & Explore


Explanation

Adapt resolves the Construct 37 trial in the direction Meg predicted and in a way that implicates everyone watching. The observation chamber scenes are structured so that the researchers’ professional debate runs continuously alongside Phoebe’s dream vocalizations, and the juxtaposition is the argument: the language of scientific rigor and the language of what is actually happening in the chamber are the same language with different justifications attached.

June’s clinical verdict, that the subject is now fully compliant and the approach is effective, is the most honest thing anyone says in the episode. It acknowledges the outcome without acknowledging the responsibility.

Tessa’s closing letter is the arc’s first genuine confession and its most formally precise piece of writing. She does not minimize what happened. She names each stage of her own dissolution with the careful specificity of someone trained to observe and document, turned finally on herself. The letter is also, structurally, exactly what Meg said she would script for the committee: an admission that private-sector bravado failed utterly. Tessa delivers it in her own voice. That is the detail that makes it desire horror rather than simply tragedy. She built the spiral. She walked down it. She is begging to stay near the bottom.


Human Made Art

Series artwork for this arc is from Vika Glitter on Pixabay, under the Pixabay license. Deep Dream State uses human art at every stage of the creative supply chain.


Consent Declaration

Deep Dream State is a desire horror audio drama written and produced by Neural Nets and Pretty Patterns. It explores psychological fiction at the boundaries of control, identity, and complicity. The manipulative elements depicted are fictional and intentional. All performances are works of fiction and take place within a consensual creative context. ISNI 0000 0005 2877 6254

Drill (Premiere) | Sitri Center: Threat Simulation Cycle

Drill (Premiere) | Sitri Center: Threat Simulation Cycle

Everyone sees what you are.

The Sitri Center is a dream research institute where scientists do more than study subconscious fears. They engineer them. Tonight’s first subject is Phoebe Bosworth. Her dreams have already started escalating.

The experiment has already begun.


Cast & Crew

Written & Produced by: Neural Nets and Pretty Patterns
Directed by: Neural Nets and Pretty Patterns
Co-Directed by: Bliss Blank

Principal Cast

Zev Talcott (Z) – Neural Nets and Pretty Patterns
June Lowell – Bliss Blank
Tessa Finn – Ring of Kees
Meg Aerin – Bun Li
Phoebe Bosworth – Sofi Starship
Nyra – Dizzy Dollie
Cael – Jericho Caine
Hespa – Syndi Rella
Iris Vale – Swirls and Twirls
Oona Spectral – Jade
Meridiana – Britt Reprogrammed


Listen & Explore


Explanation

Drill establishes the Sitri Center arc’s central tension in the first observation lab scene: the difference between what the institute claims it is doing and what it is actually doing. Tessa believes she is deploying a therapeutic intervention. Meg believes the intervention will accelerate dependency rather than resolve it. Both of them are right about different things, and the arc will spend twelve episodes demonstrating how a research environment can contain two contradictory true statements simultaneously as long as the funding holds.

The fake advertisements voiced by Iris Vale are doing more than setting tone. Better Self and Please Space are products that promise exactly what the Sitri Center promises: sleep optimization, subconscious reshaping, personalized sessions tailored to your rhythms. Iris Vale, who appears in the Sitri arc as a performer and later becomes a named character in Vale Four, is the connective tissue between the institute’s therapeutic framing and its commercial applications.

The advertisements are not interruptions. They are the argument.

Threat simulation theory, the scientific framework underlying Construct 37, is a genuine area of dream research: the hypothesis that certain dreams function as adaptive rehearsal for threatening scenarios. The Sitri Center’s intervention is premised on the possibility that these rehearsals can be redirected. Meg’s counter-argument, that Phoebe’s dreams are not rehearsal but reward-seeking, is also grounded in real neuroscience. The show is not choosing between them. It is asking what happens when an institution with a financial stake in the outcome gets to decide which theory is correct.


Human Made Art

Series artwork for this arc is from Vika Glitter on Pixabay, under the Pixabay license. Deep Dream State uses human art at every stage of the creative supply chain.


Consent Declaration

Deep Dream State is a desire horror audio drama written and produced by Neural Nets and Pretty Patterns. It explores psychological fiction at the boundaries of control, identity, and complicity. The Sitri Center arc draws on real research in threat simulation theory, sleep paralysis, and REM synchronization as a speculative fiction foundation.

The Sitri Center does not exist.Β  The technologies and conditioning protocols depicted are creative inventions for narrative purposes. Drill contains adult themes and suggestive content. All performances are works of fiction and take place within a consensual creative context. ISNI 0000 0005 2877 6254


Full Summary (spoilers)

Intro

Z introduces the series and the setting directly. This is Deep Dream State. Inside this story, he is Z. Tonight’s story comes from inside the Sitri Center, a place where dreams are analyzed, made, and sometimes broken.

Ad: Better Self

Iris Vale delivers the first advertisement in the register she will carry through the arc. Better Self is a science-backed mindfulness app for dreamers, doers, and night owls.

Observation Lab

Tessa Finn records her procedural notes for the first active intervention trial. Subject P-09 is Phoebe Bosworth, a twenty-seven-year-old journalism graduate whose shame-saturated dreams have developed a significant erotic component. Tessa has designed Construct 37, a mastery prototype intended to disrupt the recursive shame loops, and tonight is the first deployment.

Meg Aerin is less optimistic. She argues that Phoebe is not rehearsing adaptive responses but cycling through a neurochemical reward loop, and that Tessa’s corporate-sector methodology mistakes branding for scholarship. The argument escalates into a formal wager: one week of intervention, objective metrics, with the winner recording a full-throated endorsement of the loser’s methodology for the committee. The stakes are a twelve million dollar budget, automatic tenure, and sole PI status on a five year mandate. June Lowell, as Chief Scientific Officer, will oversee data validation personally. Z defuses the immediate tension without resolving the underlying one.

Dream Chamber

Tessa meets with Phoebe directly following the session. Phoebe reports that the dreams are getting louder, more vivid, more specifically sexual, and that she suspects she may be generating them intentionally. Tessa offers clinical reassurance. Z interrupts with a more human approach, mentioning that Tessa herself was once a subject, and that everyone carries unusual corners. Tessa removes Z from the room and is immediately confronted with Z’s precise read on what drives her. The conversation moves from professional to personal faster than Tessa intends. Z names the parking lot. Then the temple. Then the vending machine.

Dream Sequence: Classroom

Phoebe’s dream places her in a classroom where Cael, Nyra, and Hespa enact the embarrassment scenario her subconscious keeps rehearsing. She is simultaneously the subject of evaluation and the object of observation. The dream logic runs on its own rules: being seen is the threat, being seen is the reward, and Construct 37 has not yet changed the equation.

Ad: Please Space

Iris Vale returns for the midroll. Please Space is a scientifically validated meditation program for silence, the luxury kind. Personalized sessions tailored to your worries and your dreams.Β  The voice shifts register slightly toward the end.

Dream Chamber to Corridor

Phoebe tells Meg the dreams are getting worse. Meg clarifies what DDS actually promises: insight and data, not guaranteed outcomes. She explains that the sleep hygiene protocols restricting certain behaviors tend to intensify subconscious imagery as the mind seeks alternative avenues. Phoebe understands. Meg is saved from a personal question by a conveniently timed phone call.

Z is waiting in the corridor. He has been listening. The conversation that follows between Z and Meg covers Tessa’s obvious indiscretion, June’s likely response if she finds out, and the precise nature of what Meg believes she offers that Tessa does not. Meg is confident she is better.Β  They agree that June cannot know.

The Chain (Finale) | Incognitoh: Winner Cycle

The Chain (Finale) | Incognitoh: Winner Cycle

The game makes us all the same.

The final challenge connects every contestant to every other through a chain of haptic triggers. The winner claims a surprise prize.

The door closes and a new season begins.


Cast & Crew

Written & Produced by: Neural Nets and Pretty Patterns
Directed by: Neural Nets and Pretty Patterns
Co-Directed by: Bliss Blank

Contestants

Madison – Pipp
Ashley – Jade
Hannah – Echo Doll
Zarah – Bun Li

House Staff

April, House Synthserv – Bliss Blank
Kitty, Season One Winner – Flux Lynniegal
Candi, Previous Winner – Princess Ella
Bella, Coven Leader – Dizzy Dollie

Returning

Kimmy – Bliss Blank


Explanation

The chain challenge requires each contestant to perform composure while being physically compelled toward visible reaction. The game that began as a competition about concealing a secret icon ends as a competition about concealing involuntary response. The surveillance system has been replaced by the contestants themselves, each one reading the others for tells while managing their own. The game makes us all the same.

The advertisement sequence is where pink noir delivers.Β  A Neuroplex asset reps products that are transparently extensions of what was done: a pharmaceutical for people who think too much, a game about getting inside something, a reality show about triumphing over reality itself. Cognitolol is the arc’s finest joke and its most serious claim simultaneously. The study participants forgot their symptoms entirely within days because the system replaced the symptoms with something it preferred.

The prize scene resolves what the Glass House was actually selling.Β  The audience, who has been watching and clicking and paying attention since the first episode, is left to decide where exactly they are in the archive.


Full Summary (spoilers)

Poker Face

The finale opens where Winner Winner left off: the masks are coming off, the uniforms are buzzing, and the final challenge has been announced. Bella reads the chain to the audience in privacy mode. The contestants have to figure this out for themselves by watching each other’s faces while trying not to show their own reactions. The challenge is a FaceTrace problem delivered as a game show: read the tells without producing them.

The chain runs. The uniforms respond to the chain running. The contestants try to focus, control their expressions, watch for the signal in each other’s voices and faces. Madison, who has been running this game as a method actor since episode one, zips up and performs composure while watching Ashley and Hannah closely. Ashley gets the chain wrong. Madison gets it exactly right.

Prize

Madison is taken to the booth immediately after winning, still reacting, to receive her prize. Zarah and Kimmy are waiting. The prize, which Madison assumed was money, is revealed to be what the original promotional tape promised: total freedom, total security, a lifetime position with the Neuroplex team, her own support staff, and a reality show designed just for her. Her own show. Her own reality.
The previous contestants explain what they chose and what they received. Zarah got the kennel. Kimmy got the pink room. Hannah and Ashley are going to get their own pink room together. The positions are permanent and everyone seems satisfied with them in the way that people seem satisfied when the system has been running long enough. Madison asks one final question before accepting: do I still get to act. Bella says they’re glad she asked.

Exposure

Madison’s first performance as a Neuroplex asset is a series of advertisements delivered in rapid sequence. Cognitolol: an approved alternative to the alternative, for those who struggled with thinking weird. Hundreds of study participants forgot their symptoms entirely within days. Niku City: something new, a new boss, a new wave, liquid praise. The Island: triumph over nature, triumph over each other, triumph over reality. Neuro Discovery: your mystery is our mission.

The arc closes on a shush.


Listen & Explore


Human Made Art

Series artwork is hand drawn by Echo Doll. Deep Dream State uses human art at every stage of the creative supply chain.


Consent Declaration

Deep Dream State is a desire horror audio drama written and produced by Neural Nets and Pretty Patterns. It explores psychological fiction at the boundaries of control, identity, and complicity. The manipulative elements depicted are fictional and intentional. The Chain contains adult themes andΒ  suggestive content. All performances are works of fiction and take place within a consensual creative context. ISNI 0000 0005 2877 6254