Tag: threshold-imagery

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.  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