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An empty mall. A deserted office hallway. A hotel corridor that feels longer than it should.
Liminal spaces are transitional environments — places built for movement, not stillness. But when those spaces become empty, something feels unsettling.
In this episode of The Midnight Drive, we explore the psychology of liminal spaces and the rise of The Backrooms — a modern internet myth born from the unease of endless, fluorescent-lit rooms.
From the concept of thresholds and in-between states to the viral expansion of Backrooms “journals” and levels, this episode examines how digital folklore evolves — and why empty spaces feel so deeply wrong.
What happens when a place designed for transition forgets to transition?
This episode is part of an ongoing exploration of modern folklore, internet mythology, and the psychology of fear.
© 2026 Hondira LLC. All rights reserved.
By The Midnight DriveAn empty mall. A deserted office hallway. A hotel corridor that feels longer than it should.
Liminal spaces are transitional environments — places built for movement, not stillness. But when those spaces become empty, something feels unsettling.
In this episode of The Midnight Drive, we explore the psychology of liminal spaces and the rise of The Backrooms — a modern internet myth born from the unease of endless, fluorescent-lit rooms.
From the concept of thresholds and in-between states to the viral expansion of Backrooms “journals” and levels, this episode examines how digital folklore evolves — and why empty spaces feel so deeply wrong.
What happens when a place designed for transition forgets to transition?
This episode is part of an ongoing exploration of modern folklore, internet mythology, and the psychology of fear.
© 2026 Hondira LLC. All rights reserved.