Trigger Warning: Depictions of hallucinations and nightmares, mild references to substance abuse, depression, and other mental health stuff, and somewhat masked political commentary.
Head Pillow - Symbolizes birth, dawn of a new day, as narrator awakens.
Have a Cookie. They're Free! - Criticizes the cold impersonality of the consumer capitalism. Marks the beggining of the narrator's paranoia.
Hospital Hallway - The narrator realizes the convenience promised to them comes at a cost. Becomes disillusioned and further paranoid
Kelvin - The narrator has trouble communicating with his friends, feeling as if every word spoken is a puff of cold air.
Worthless Lightbath- The narrator hides himself behind glowing screens to avoid social interactions from then on.
Don't Let Me Go - The narrator pleads with his girlfriend not to leave him, even though she now must, due to his despondency and emotional liability.
The Devil's Mistake - The narrator realizes that essentially he has no one left to talk to in his life, and the consequences of his actions begin to dawn on him.
Dark Places - Panicked, the narrator downs aderall and locks himself in a pitch black room, entering a state of psychosis with terrifying hallucinations.
Mooonlight Pool - The narrator passes out and has a nightmare where he is trapped in a linoleum cavern, with black tentacles fondling him. At this point, he has derealizes to the point where his internal voice sounds different from himself.
Good-for-Nothing Arp - The narrator steps outside into the blinding light, hungover and confused, unable to understand the words spoken around him.
Daily Starch - The narrator tries to re-enter his friend circle, but his paranoid delusions fool him into thinking they are acting with malice, and are out to get him.
Landfill - The narrator enters a new relationship, desperate for some sort of social interaction, with a partner who torments him and dumps her negativity onto him.
The Long Walk - Fed up with it all, the narrator runs away from home. He breaks down, miles away, regretting his decision.
A Call From Home - The narrator's dad and friends call him to check up on him, and his dad offers him a ride home.
Hold Me Tightly - The narrator apolgizes to the people he hurt, and vows to turn his life around.
Foot Pillow - The narrator is tucked into bed as music box plays, ready to recover the next morning.