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Bryn Celli Ddu - Wales
The Doors Weren’t the Afterlife: The School Spirits Finale Just Opened a Second Limbo
Okay… we need to talk about the finale of School Spirits.
Because honestly?
What did we just witness.
This show keeps getting better in a way that reminds me of the first time I watched Being Human. That same eerie balance between supernatural mythology and emotional storytelling.
And what impresses me the most is how carefully the series treats the paranormal framework behind its story.
Yes, it’s still television — obviously some things are dramatized to serve the narrative. But the core concepts about energy, liminal spaces, and the veil between worlds are surprisingly aligned with real-world paranormal theories.
For someone like me who follows ghost-hunting research quite closely, that level of care is genuinely impressive.
When a Show Isn’t Writing for Fan Service
One thing that becomes very obvious watching School Spirits is the difference between writing driven by story and writing influenced by fandom pressure.
School Spirits has eight episodes per season.
But every single episode matters.
The narrative is tight. Nothing feels random. The mythology unfolds slowly but deliberately, and the writers clearly know where they’re going.
There’s no pandering, no shortcuts, no last-minute fan service.
Compare that to some mainstream network shows where audience expectations sometimes start steering the ship, and the difference becomes even more striking.
Ironically, I’m almost glad School Spirits isn’t massively mainstream yet.
Because it allows the writers to keep building their world exactly the way they want.
The Finale’s Biggest Twist: The Doors Aren’t the End
For the longest time, we assumed the mysterious doors were the way out.
The final step.
The moment where the trapped spirits finally move on.
But the finale completely flips that assumption.
Instead of leading to the “afterlife,” the doors appear to lead into another liminal space.
A second waiting room.
Another layer.
Which means the place where the ghosts were trapped before might already have been just the first level of something much larger.
And that’s where the show introduces one of the most fascinating concepts of the finale.
The Ley Lines Theory
Janet refers to the phenomenon as Ley Lines.
If you’re familiar with paranormal or esoteric theories, you probably recognized that term immediately.
Ley Lines were first popularized in 1921 by Alfred Watkins. Originally he theorized they were ancient pathways connecting landmarks used for navigation.
But over time, the concept evolved into something much more mystical.
Many researchers now believe Ley Lines are energy currents that run through the Earth, connecting powerful energetic locations across the planet.
Think of them as the energetic circulatory system of the Earth.
Some famous examples connect sacred or historically powerful locations — places that seem to share unusual energetic patterns.
And if School Spirits is using this concept, it changes everything about how their afterlife system works.
The Veil Between Worlds
In paranormal theory, increased energy activity along Ley Lines can thin the veil between dimensions.
Which means the barrier between the living and the dead becomes weaker.
This actually mirrors something many paranormal investigators claim to observe: that communication phenomena appear stronger now than decades ago.
School Spirits seems to be playing with that same idea.
The boundary that once trapped the spirits inside the school has now broken.
They can leave.
They can move.
And that suggests the Ley Lines are acting as corridors between different states of existence.
Not the final destination.
Just another passage.
The Forest Limbo
The forest sequence might be the most important clue in the entire finale.
Across the river, we see peaceful figures — including Simon’s mother and the pastor with the children.
They look calm.
They look… complete.
But the ghosts cannot reach them.
Dawnn warns that if you cross the river, you return.
At first I assumed that meant returning to the school world.
But now I think something more complex is happening.
Crossing the river may send a spirit back to the entry point of the Ley Line network.
Which explains why Dawnn says it’s incredibly difficult for spirits to find each other there.
The forest isn’t the afterlife.
It’s another liminal maze.
A transitional corridor.
And somewhere beyond that river might be the real “beyond.”
The Possession Twist
Then the finale drops another bombshell.
Van Aight is now inside Maddie’s mother’s body.
Which raises an enormous question:
Where is Maddie’s mother’s spirit?
The most logical explanation is the hospital scene.
If the possession happened there, then her spirit might now be trapped exactly the way Maddie once was.
And if that’s the case, there’s one very interesting implication.
Xavier might be able to see her.
The New Ghost Team in the Forest
Right now, the forest limbo contains:
Dawn
Janet
Wally
Maddie’s father
That combination alone suggests the next season could explore a completely new supernatural layer.
The show already expanded its mythology this season with the introduction of the Forgotten, and the explanation that if the place of death disappears, the door may never appear.
But the finale suggests we’re only scratching the surface of how this system works.
Are We Heading Toward the Final Act?
The biggest narrative shift is Van Aight.
This season introduced him as a mysterious figure pursuing his own goals.
But now?
Those goals are gone.
The protagonists ruined his plans.
Which means his motivation has shifted.
From ambition…
to revenge.
And in storytelling terms, that usually signals something important.
When the central villain moves from long-term plotting to personal conflict, the story is often approaching its endgame.
That’s why I suspect Season 4 might be the beginning of the final arc.
Maybe the last season.
At most, I could see the show stretching to a fifth.
But the story already feels like it’s heading toward its ultimate confrontation.
A Dark Possibility for Maddie
And here’s the theory that keeps haunting me.
The most logical ending might actually be tragic.
What if Maddie dies?
Not in a meaningless way — but as the final step in resolving the entire liminal system the show has built.
It would be heartbreaking.
But narratively?
It would make sense.
More Questions Than Answers
The finale didn’t just close a chapter.
It exploded the mythology.
Ley Lines. Multiple limbos. Possession. The forest maze.
We now have more questions than ever.
And honestly?
I love that.
Because if this finale proved anything, it’s that School Spirits is playing a much bigger game than we originally thought.
Your Turn
So now I’m curious.
What are your theories about the School Spirits finale?
What do you think the forest really is?
And what do you think Season 4 is going to reveal?
leylines - the comic
overview
page 6/?
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no, I won't elaborate on how fucking long it took me to paint Jon and how done I was with him... @fairielux has some stories to tell you istg 🤭
after way too long, here's page 6. I apologize but can't promise more frequent updates.
thank you for sticking around if you do. I promise, I'll finish this 🙏
this comic was inspired by @slideleftt 's fic leylines. please, please read it cause it's kinda changed my life. and it's very dear to me.
dear slidey, please be patient with me and the updates 🫶
~
tag list under the cut. pls tell me if you wanna be tagged whenever I post smth about my art and writing.
sketch for my friend crow!
Ley Lines and Real Life References:
Interesting how Sverdlovsk is rich in all sort of mineral and ores, yet its scares in coal and natural gas. It needs to have those imported.
Happy #AudioDramaSunday! A day late lol, I was slow this week. But Kingmaker Histories is back! Super Suits is back! Starfall is back! So much good work this week! Let’s goooooo
🪐 I have been listening to Leylines since it started because I love Good Story Guild, and Leylines is so cool. It’s a prestige family drama wrapped in a neat scifi concept and this week’s episode in particular really drive home the family dynamic that makes this show special. Listen to Leylines and cry about brothers with me.
🐺 Stories from Ylelmore continues to absolutely kill me. I think Rion’s problems with his werewolfism resonates with a lot of different real life challenges to being alive—racism, transphobia—but in this ep it felt like a potent nod to ableism as well. At what point does someone get to do something risky for their own mental wellbeing? At what point do one’s friends get to deny your choices to protect you? I don’t want to see what this is going to do to the kids’ friendship, except that I have to know.
🌊 Tales from the Fringes of Reality always presents us with these small perfect images of family care or unexpected friendship, but Paul Warren’s sentient moss is maybe the best thing I’ve ever heard. The focus this episode on slowing down, appreciating the moment, and resting really struck a chord. It was perfect.
😈 Forgive Me! is SO GOOD. This episode bright in Jeffrey Cranor, always a treat, to tackle fears both real and intangible that religion brings into our lives. I was raised religious and…woof. Like this character is right, the candy-coated Sunday School version of the Bible is incomplete, and does nothing to prepare a kid for the real and actual danger in the world. Especially in light of the recent hurricanes which are likely exacerbated by climate change, how are we supposed to react? It has a pretty satisfying ending for a question without many good answers.
🌝 Dead Space: Deep Cover ended this week as well, and oh jeez louise. This makes me want to play the video game, and i don’t really do video games. Highly recommend, it is a scifi horror treat.
Hey! My sweet baby kitty Mothman had a vet bill come up this week that I was less than prepared for, so if you like the stuff I make (like Inn Between, The Dead, and Re: Dracula) and this post, could you consider buying me a ko-fi?
Become a supporter of Hannah Wright today! ❤️ Ko-fi lets you support the creators you love with no fees on donations.
Obligatory cat pic! Hark, a podcat!
Leylines????? In my bananas??? More likely than you think
I'm frustrated by this whole leyline thing. It's tied up so much with the whole ancient aliens thing, and the idea that there was some kind of grand orchestration of "put X thing in Y place" is dumb. I just want to believe in cool energy lines under the earth, I don't care about the racist starseed indigo children bullshit.
It's such a cool idea, but it's tainted by its origin. It's so connected into the weird alien bullshit that you can't really get it out of there unless you start from scratch.
On the other hand, the criticism section of the Wikipedia article is incredible and worth a read because of how sassy people get: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ley_line#Criticism
(The "see also" section is also worth a look because of how sassy it gets, too.)