Those Eerie Backrooms

“From the most innocent and mundane come the things we fear the most.”

–Michael Smith, blogger, 20 January, 2023.

I’ve often had feelings of unease and then a questioning of reality during and following innocent errands, trips to new places (most of which were hardly “new” but new to me, as in, places I’d never been before.

Most recently, and perhaps significantly as well, was a trip to an oddly generic office building in Ellicott City. I was to see an ophthalmology specialist, a plastic surgeon.

Driven there by my healthcare worker who accompanied me to the suite, I was struck immediately by the ordinary familiarity with it. I had been to the location before, I was certain of it. I knew the area well, as it contains a somewhat infamous and infuriating intersection, known for accidents, road rage and confusion among drivers because of limited vision ahead and the lack of automatic signal. There is one close by, but it only makes the problem of entering its intersection worse. You never forget such a place because traffic backs up ahead of the intersection itself by an obsolete merge area with little allowance for courtesy or patience. Yes. I’d been here before. It even has a place in my novel.

Upon entering the building, I was gripped by an uncanny feeling which had the promise of getting more serious.

Not Déjà Vu. I knew I’d been in the building so that particular sensation was not present. Of course, it had been sufficiently into the past that I could not recall which doctor or practice I had been there to see, and of course that causes people to be distracted on a somewhat semi conscious level. And this, I suppose, could contribute to what I experienced next.

My healthcare worker punched the elevator button for the second floor and the doors closed. Assuming that we were on the first floor, it took too long to reach the second floor. It was wrong, just as the tiny lobby had been wrong. I actually said to her that I didn’t like the whole building because it just felt “off”. She pretty much ignored this and that’s as it should be. But as we turned a corner to walk through one of two long hallways, it felt even more off, as if I had entered some sort of parallel universe, one I did not belong in. It felt like it wasn’t real, as if staying there would result in some nebulous but unfortunate outcome.

Once we reached the proper office suite, it should have cleared up. In different spaces, energy, temperature and pressure can have slight changes. These could explain why one suddenly forgets why they have gone to the kitchen, which happens to everyone. We stand, vacantly staring, until we either remember our reason for being there, or give up. It’s so common an experience that no one really feels fearful of it.

The reception area was generic, but small; so much so that an appropriately wallpapered support beam stood in the center of the room. This subconsciously forces one to picture the building at its barebone newest appearance before finishing carpentry crews moved in. It’s there, but you never really put much thought to it unless you’re an architect, who of course would know the entire building on sight and see its blueprint in his or her mind.

In practice, though, it adds a certain claustrophobic element, and various reactions from annoyance to terror are probably felt quite plainly by incoming clients. Around this county it is common structure. I’ve seen it before but there is always something that makes each suite different: these range from what type of practice or other business uses the space, but all have at least light touches which make them unique in some fashion. The counter at the reception window had at the right end a large silver-colored candle box, usually associated with Christmas decorations of an old-fashioned lantern vein. I’ve wanted one for years. Never seen one before except in advertising or as elements in holiday season wallpapers for computers and phones.

That’s what I think of as a grounding point. It is real.

Or is it? You’ll question everything before you leave here, old man.

There comes a moment when that voice speaks inside you, and at least a good number, no matter how much in the minority they are, believe once again that their perception proves that we are living in a simulation.

Personally, my take on “simulation reality” is that it would still prove the existence of God; a higher being, a creator, and that our souls are who and what we really are, and physical life in our sense is temporary, fleeting, but very real.

In other words, who built the machine? It’s a way for people to account for their anti-religious stances while paradoxically also proving that they can in fact believe in some higher being.

The doctor saw me, and in his examination room, a small picture hung. A depiction of a doctor and patient as if painted in Ancient Egypt. It was singularly remarkable, another grounding object.

But wait, did I really see it, or was it some trick because I’m about to replay “Assassin’s Creed Origins”, a game which takes place in Ancient Egypt?

Come on, now, this questioning of ordinary life is really getting out of hand.

That wasn’t the end of this weird excursion. Oh, no. It gets worse.

Having set the date for the optic surgery, having also been reassured that I did not have cancer, you’d think I’d feel all set. I should have; after covid-19’s initial outbreak and disruption of most healthcare concerns, I’m finally taking care of myself.

My healthcare worker had left after checking in. I had to go downstairs and call her. I left the office, and right outside of the door, there was this old man. Really old, and he was bent as he walked, concealing his face. Immediately he struck me as sinister, and after asking him which direction the elevator was in (a generic hallway, exit signs at both ends, and the lack of anything to regain one’s bearings especially if vision impaired is unsettling), I got the idea that I’d just asked the devil which way to go.

I followed him at a lagging pace. I had severe misgivings, however hilarious they seem now, about getting on an elevator with him and going the opposite direction of up.

I passed a door marked “women” and decided I’d use the men’s room. But I couldn’t find it. I really did need to go; I’d had a glass of water with my meds before leaving. I said to the old man, who was now insisting that I get on the elevator, where the Men’s room was. He pointed but paused, so I told him to go ahead. He did, but didn’t he seem disappointed?

Entering the latrine was completely disequilibrating: it, too, was all wrong. The urinal was too small in proportion to the room and in comparison to every other pisser I’d ever seen!

The same generic wallpaper was there, yellowish-beige, a very unsettling color if ever I saw one. The only way it could have been worse was if they were blood-red or all black.

I went to wash my hands and found the hottest water I had felt since slipping while making pasta and plunging my left hand into boiling water. Had the old man really been the devil, and was he now punishing me for not going down on the elevator with him?

Back at the elevator, I noticed a door to a suite adorned with enormous silver laurel leaves: who does that, I wondered. It is bizarre and out of place and gave me the flying shits. I had to get out of this unholy place!

Pushed the button for the first floor. Exited the elevator only to find myself looking through a huge window onto the parking lot below. I stepped back into the elevator and found a button marked “LL” — Lower Level. I hesitated. I knew it was the floor we had entered the building on, but why mark it such when it should be the first floor? I wondered if the old man would be waiting, if the elevator would take me below ground. Far below ground. All of this seems silly now, because at no time did I feel panic. It was all disorienting and creepy, but not frightening. Except for the old man, who in reality must have been acting out of kindness. Still, the whole setting contributed to my perception, and in future, more consideration must be given to ensure that the layout and aesthetics of buildings comfort rather than the opposite. Because once outside, I felt better, less oppressed in the rain and cold air.

LIMINAL

There’s creepy pasta all over the internet, so much that there’s always more to catch up on. One of them involves “liminal spaces”. The first story and accompanying photograph involved something called “noclipping” a sort of transport into another reality, almost always accidentally. One ends up in a liminal space, like an office floor with yellow walls and absolutely no people or even furnishings. There is nothing but miles of connecting offices and one can actually become trapped there. Coming from 4chan initially, this concept has of course migrated to reddit, where it has been added to. Now long hallways exist in which you can walk until you die and never find a way out. Noclipping is a new concept for me, (I’ve encountered it in video games) but I take it to mean an accident during normal travel which deposits one into an alternate, in-between reality.

I have encountered the feeling before. Once, a very long time ago, in the 1980s when mega-malls were the next great part of the American Dream, I had to deliver a carpet to a shop called T-shirts Plus in the White Marsh Mall. The mall was unfinished, and that’s not an experience I’ve ever wanted to repeat. I walked through the mall with a heavy roll of Burlington Industries carpet slung over my shoulder (I was so much younger then) and the only comfort was a few construction workers above me.

While it was fascinating to see the mall in incomplete condition, it was also unnerving and uncomfortable. With the failure of malls to survive Reaganomics, and finally strip malls and online shopping, urban exploration has become popular, as have the recorded proof, both visual and auditory, of such risky endeavors. Trespassing is one thing; risking one’s life and limb quite another.

Liminal spaces are a real fear, although unquantified and little known, that I believe has been with us for a very long time. Whether psychologists want to examine the phenomenon, I can’t say, but it certainly does seem to qualify for scrutiny. It appeals to a fear of being lost and never found, a fear of being watched or menaced by an unseen force or being, a fear of being trapped, closed-in, and even of open spaces.

And while I believe these fears to be ancient in origin, I believe it all comes from one fear more than any others: the loss of control over one’s own life.

Since I have never been in control and believe that the concept of it is delusion and unreal, I have nothing to fear.

But yesterday, I came very close.

The old man was no devil. But in heightened awareness, when one suffers from various maladies, the wrong surroundings can make one believe almost anything.

Perhaps no one can explain the phenomenon more concisely than the Why Files personalities A.J. and Hecklefish. Here is the episode that gives us the skinny on liminal spaces and how they have entered pop culture.

And if you should find yourself somewhere strange, a featureless, empty space which evokes a feeling of the uncanny, of being menaced, trapped or lost, don’t worry.

You aren’t really alone.

Norway Scares The Hell Out Of Me And I Don’t Know Why

The critics don’t like it. Ragnarok, the battle to end all wars, given yet another take, this time in a Netflix series, but with high school kids who are reincarnated gods. Thor is a senior with dyslexia and social awkwardness and so full of angst it’s pathetic. I love that concept; but the series really got under my skin.

According to imdb and Wikipedia, even the people and government of Norway hate this series. There’s first and foremost the thought that it makes the Scandinavian country look bad. They don’t like the whole climate change and big corporation theme. Then there’s the question of which dialect is used. They say it’s wrong. And anyone who doesn’t speak the language has to use subtitles. In English, it’s dubbed, but none of these are problems for me, and that’s weird because it is not my habit to be patient with dubbed films, much less a series.

Then again, I remember the hit film The Good, The Bad and The Ugly with Clint Eastwood, Eli Wallach and Lee Van Cleef, along with a huge cast. And only those three spoke English. All of the rest are speaking mostly Italian and were dubbed in post production with no effort at synchronization at all. If I loved that film enough to never notice that none of the cast but the main three spoke English the first time I saw it, then Ragnarok is no problem.

The series is well worth seeing, easy to binge and hopefully season 3, not yet confirmed, is going to happen.

But there were things I had trouble with. And none of them are the dubbing or the music or filming methods. Nothing technical or to do with the actors, who I found incredible.

First, and this is a spoiler, sorry; but a powerful character played by an extraordinary actress is killed off in the first episode. It’s necessary for motivational purposes for main character Magne as Thor reincarnated. She was his only friend in his new school, accepted him without reservation and was not romantically into him. Friendship in its most pure form is one of the most intimate things humans have the power to engage in, yet so seldom do. When she dies, Magne knows it was a homicide. Nor does he have long to find his prime suspect even though he is believed by no one and ends up in trouble with the school’s administration and with the police. Eventually he’s diagnosed in a forced mental evaluation as a paranoid schizophrenic, and it’s remarkable how the writers pulled this off.

But the problem I have with the series is where it is filmed and with one actress in particular.

I wasn’t triggered by any of the themes. Not loss, not the characters being cruel teens. I was very profoundly upset with the location. As if I had been there, and not under happy circumstances. On the contrary, I have never seen a place in film or TV that upset me more. It made the episodes uncomfortable for me. A haunting place to behold, a place the worst ones in my worst nightmares cannot possibly equal.

This feeling is not easy to describe. Not like deja vu as I’ve experienced it before. More of a primordial and vestigial terror at even the quickest shot of landscape. And the only explanation I can find is one I do not like.

As I’ve written about before, with nightmares, some are more vivid than others. Some have come true to an extent; others are tormented by what I believe are demonic spirits which are free to enter the dream realm because they are not human and never were.

DNA?

I’ve believed most of my life that memories are carried in our DNA. Long before I read anything about it, I believed in it.

Instinct cannot account for certain responses to stimuli in an infant or toddler, or even in older individuals. The unreasonable fear of an object or image is mysterious and a hotly debated subject.

Sometimes it’s described as a phobia by a parent or, in extreme cases, a pediatrician or even a psychiatric specialist.

I know phobias are very real and some are quite debilitating. They are resistant to psychotropic drugs and I have seen with my own eyes people who were full of medications and yet were still out of their minds with terror at certain things. Things that no doctor or nurse understood. Things that made nurses verbally abusive with their loss of patience at the moaning, cringing and crying. The subject was rendered immobile but vocal and was eventually injected with something strong, I’m guessing chlorpromazine as they became docile and often fell asleep within minutes.

Let’s be clear: I’m not confusing anxiety or psychosis with real terror. There was always a thing involved which served as a trigger. Away from it, they were different people.

I heard a woman being prepped for surgery once. I too was being prepped. Standard procedure, you go in, strip, put on a gown and lie down. Next comes the insertion of the IV needle and cath, with the needle removed once the catheter is secured by tape. Some people are “hard sticks”, very difficult to get veins to pop up and not roll with the syringe. I’ve had IVs in my chest, back of the lower neck, above the elbow, the dorsal portion of the hand and other weird places after attempts at more traditional sticking failed. Then again, while in the back of an airborne Huey, an Army medic got me in one try. It’s like that.

This woman was screaming bloody murder. Literally, because she shrieked, “You’re killing me!”

As far as I know: she survived getting an IV started.

I understand the Fear of needles. Older people remember the large bore syringes of yore that really hurt, especially in the ass. Most phlebotomists and anesthesiologists today use the much smaller ones with butterflies to provide a more steady hold.

But what if your grandfather served in Korea or Vietnam and was severely wounded? He would have gone to a veteran’s hospital, had surgeries, lengthy aftercare. And the endless needles. Would his loathing of them be available to you, passed to you, through genetic memory? Can that happen?

It is one thing to be afraid of a needle, another altogether to get absolutely fucking bozo.

Why are people apparently born with phobias? Because if you think about it, that shouldn’t happen. Fear is most often triggered by an unknown thing that a child may have been warned about. Or by instinct. When faced with peddling a bike like hell to escape a dog in full chase mode, what triggered the flight response? The child may never have encountered a bad dog before, so why evade it? Instinct, yes, but I say there’s more to it than that.

Why fear the night? That’s an easy one, isn’t it? Because of course each generation from Neanderthal to modern humans knew that people about at night vanished without a trace except for a few bones and some big piles of shit, right?

And of course competing and hostile tribes which were numerically disadvantaged would use the cover of darkness to stage thefts and surprise raids.

Humans searched for ways, from open fires to torches to oil lamps, candles and gas lights to do away with darkness, so fearful and dangerous. Therefore less and less have we feared the night. In modern industrialized countries, artificial light has caused a thing called “light pollution”, which means ground lights produce a glare which interferes with amateur astronomy and celestial event watching. Want to see the Leonid meteor shower in the United States this November? Good luck. Little of the United States is left with low levels of light pollution, and most of it is so obstructed that you won’t see much of anything at all.

Yet we do still fear the night, do we not? Crime. Accidents. Being lost after waiting too long to leave a national park. You name it.

In some European countries and certainly the African interior as well as most of North Korea, the darkness is never pierced by light; satellite imagery shows it in all of it’s shocking detail. There, they certainly fear the dark.

Every parent, no matter where they live, though, has to deal with their child being terrified when you say goodnight, tuck them in and turn off the light. Why is a child in a secure environment afraid of the dark?

Let us assume the house has no sign of being haunted. The child is too young to have friends who tell scary stories. You are a responsible parent and make sure not to expose him or her to any media that could cause fear of an unreasonable cause. Where does that fear come from, if not learned?

If we insist it is purely instinctual then other things automatically make no sense.

Like peculiar phobias and clear memories as told by toddlers and young children as well as symptoms of post traumatic stress disorder.

We’ve read accounts of anecdotal evidence of strange, inexplicable memories as told by kids. Some cannot be passed down through DNA because the details are intricate but involve people and places too far away, and too recent or involving different races which are not part of the family tree and point more toward reincarnation or some supernatural transference of memory.

What about this, then: I have an aversion to the Norwegian countryside, but no particular detailed memory to account for it, yet a DNA test specified Norway as part of my heritage. I don’t know what to make of it, because I had no knowledge of any Scandinavian country, defined as Norway, Sweden and Denmark. And until 1904 Norway and Sweden were one country. At least for some time. These are the Norse of old, and I’ve got this hunch that since they invaded England, and the rest of my ancestral DNA is Irish, Welsh, English and Scottish, that I come from Nordic kin that were not likely in Norway. Why then my queasy fear? No clue. Unless, of course, contained in their genes they retained ancestral memories from the homeland. And those memories were not pleasant.

***

Several times in my life, a particular word I did not know would come to mind. It would be there, unmoving, and I would not look for their meaning in the extensive collection of encyclopedias or massive dictionaries in my parent’s house. I feared words that made no sense to me because I hadn’t heard them. Where did they come from?

The first one I remember is “Ragnarök”. It just kept repeating over and over in my head. I had no education on the Vikings, on Scandinavia, or even much on Germany. I couldn’t have heard it or known it. I was far too young.

By now thanks to film and TV we know what Ragnarök is: a climactic battle between giants and the Norse gods, including Thor and Odin. The battle is fierce and ends in utter destruction. However, there’s a cyclical component: two humans survive to repopulate the world and eventually, the gods return. Whether a second battle eventually takes place is open to interpretation.

The second word is Götterdämerung, which basically means the violent, destructive, fiery downfall of a particular entity, a group, town, country, or civilization. However when translated properly it means the same event as Ragnarök. The downfall, marked by a destructive battle, of the gods.

All manner of the Norse mythological creatures are present and engaged, including Fenrir, a kind of horrible wolf, seen in ancient depictions devouring Odin or Thor.

Sure, it’s all myth, but the Germanic roots of Scandinavian people are old and steeped in its own preoccupation with mythology. It isn’t insignificant that Germanic peoples predated some of the later Scandinavians, because Hitler and even more so Himmler, had these ideas about pure Aryan blood.

I have other snapshots of memory as well, particularly of approaching a somewhat rounded cottage at dusk. I saw a light through the trees that lined the dirt path, and even now seeing someone’s lamp post through the trees puts me in a near trance.

People did not cut grass. At least not like today; grazing animals like sheep or goats did the job nicely.

I can remember approaching the door. Amber light came through a window set in the door. It had diamond-shaped panes and if I see anything like it now, I’m going into a state of mind in which I’ll be gone.

Is genetic memory real?

Anecdotal evidence aside, more experts are taking the possibility seriously. I wish I hadn’t been triggered; but I have so many triggers that this vestigial memory thing could not harm me more than I already am.

Christians don’t talk much about memories contained in DNA. Nor do they generally like the idea of reincarnation.

But who knows?

If God is really up there, who’s to say he didn’t provide us with tools to survive with? He gave us opposing thumbs, right?

But we’re a cocky bunch.

Too many of us think that they know everything.

Well, we don’t. And we never will, either.

I prefer to worship my own way, without the hindering influence of a church. I keep an open mind because I can’t prove that I know anything.