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FX's Grotesquerie: Unraveling Lois' Liminal Nightmare – coma vs. Threshold!
FX's Grotesquerie throws a curveball in episode seven. We discover Detective Lois Tryon (Niecy Nash-Betts) is on life support; this shocking reveal is one of the more impactful cliffhangers within the show, setting the audience and other viewers in eager anticipation of that promised conclusion, which had to deal with these revelations; yet is revealed that it isn't actually Marshall (Courtney B. Vance) on life support. The even bigger surprise is the explanation itself: the reason Lois is miraculously recovering is something far stranger than a simple coma: a liminal state! This makes it necessary to understand what those specific terms truly imply within a very clinical and medical context! A major plot twist this late in Grotesquerie's first season. This sets an interesting path and establishes a critical moment to make it extremely surprising.
This makes Lois' awakening an absolute game-changer. She's thrust back into reality after having endured that long and extremely bizarre series of nightmares that made those serial killings–the entire mystery around the Grotesquerie killer—even more impactful, full of extremely interesting imagery. Those events with biblical references, really showing the intensity and emotional weight, were only actually those events playing within Lois' own consciousness itself. And those earlier six episodes? Pure nightmare. All the shocking mystery, horror and those emotional scenes that took so many characters by complete surprise was actually played entirely in Lois' mind! The events that allowed her recovery involved an even more complicated explanation, based upon what the doctors considered as being a liminal state, not merely a coma!
The word “liminal” comes from the Latin “limen”, which means "threshold". A liminal state is that in-between moment – like a transition. Think of a train station between trains– it’s a physical space acting as a transit point. A liminal state can also be mental; it could also be interpreted more simply as being between those key ideas and decisions: it’s a phase; an interim period of significant change between one major state and another. In those kinds of cases, an individual is not considered being at the actual intended “final destination”, whatever it is, or some possible “mental resolution” that an individual involved could be undergoing or dealing with, mentally.
These liminal states can happen because of major life changes; creating periods of being seemingly stalled: unable to progress; not entirely complete in various aspects which are required to transition from the one period to the other and is shown through various examples and this particular use of the concept makes this situation within Grotesquerie all the more meaningful. Lois’ situation is complex: recently retired, possibly about to divorce her husband, and recovering from addiction. All of these situations played a very significant part and made all of those experiences which played out in her nightmarish mental landscape that is shown and experienced by her entirely from those difficult points that are conveyed.
A coma doesn't necessarily mean you're in a liminal state. People might show some levels of brain activity during a coma and survive—about 34% do; and depending upon that patient's physical condition and their past medical history, various levels of permanent injury might occur and a disability and complete lack of cognitive function might even happen and recovery in some of those circumstances may involve ongoing and significant additional assistance or may never return. This depends critically on what injuries actually happened. Recovery would require significantly extended and continued physical therapy as well as support networks. That recovery timeframe also can extend greatly; taking months or even longer than that timeframe could imply.
Lois’s therapist (Santino Fontana) mentions that he believes she actually is going through that kind of psychological state because of extremely high brain activity, unlike those usually undergoing that simple state of coma. It suggests something completely different was occurring and is critically significant for her remarkable survival and for explaining those events within the prior six episodes: Those vivid and detailed memories weren’t random fantasies or pure mental inventions by Lois: it appears her dreamworld holds important clues regarding her actual investigation and what she actually observed during this entire process of recovering!
Grotesquerie's twist on Lois's state was brilliant— emphasizing what mental spaces, and not simply physical states or clinical classifications truly are! And emphasizing a liminal state instead of just a coma allows an even deeper psychological exploration. Lois wakes up physically intact, yet totally different internally; that period spent within the liminal state is shown to have resulted in incredibly nuanced and deeply emotionally affecting experiences that had an impact, shaping her emotionally through her time in the altered state of consciousness. This creates this highly satisfying mystery!