In the world of Severance, Lumen Industries is more than a workplace—it’s a web of secrets and psychological manipulation. Fans have been piecing together clues, and it’s clear that the company holds many mysteries within its walls. Here are 14 secrets and strange details from the show, each shedding light on the dark depths of Lumen’s influence over its employees.
1. Color Psychology and Control
One of the more subtle mysteries in Severance is Lumen’s strategic use of color throughout its offices. Green walls, red folders, and blue pens aren’t merely decorative; they’re carefully chosen tools in Lumen’s psychological warfare against its employees. Colors seem to condition responses and reinforce obedience, whether innies realize it or not. Miss Casey’s use of color-specific objects during wellness sessions illustrates how each hue subtly manipulates the innies on a subconscious level, contributing to Lumen’s mental control.
2. Petey’s Map and the Secret Rooms
Petey’s hand-drawn map, which Mark discovers after Petey’s breakdown, hints at hidden spaces like the ominous “Coil of Doom” and other potential living quarters deep within Lumen’s facility. These rooms, inaccessible to most employees, suggest there are parts of Lumen designed to keep its most disturbing secrets hidden from view. The very existence of these rooms hints at a dark underbelly, holding untold truths about the company’s true intentions.
3. The Break Room: Torture as Discipline
The so-called “break room” at Lumen is nothing like a break room should be. Instead of a place to relax, it’s a torture chamber where disobedient employees are forced to repeat scripted phrases until they break. This space reveals the disturbing lengths Lumen will go to enforce compliance, using psychological punishment to ensure everyone falls in line. This room is just one of many tools Lumen uses to control its innies, leading viewers to wonder what other horrors await.
4. The Goat Room and Ritualistic Symbolism
One of the most bizarre moments in Severance is the goat room, where a man is seen caring for live goats. The purpose of the goats remains entirely up for speculation, with some fans suggesting they could symbolize indoctrination or serve as part of biological experiments. Goats also have symbolic resonance in occult practices, and with recurring goat references, such as in Dylan’s waffle party, Lumen’s mysterious rituals feel tied to something larger, maybe even sinister.
5. Miss Cobel’s Shrine and Personal Agenda
Miss Cobel is one of Lumen’s most loyal and terrifying employees, overseeing both innies and outies to ensure total compliance. Yet her shrine, filled with curious items like her mother’s hospital band, a goat’s head, and photos of herself at the Myrtle Egan School for Girls, hints that her loyalty may be more personal than professional. Could her allegiance to Lumen mask a hidden vendetta, revealing layers of obsession not just with the Egan family but with exacting some sort of revenge?
6. Kier Egan’s Image and the “Nine Virtues”
Kier Egan, the founder of Lumen, is idolized throughout the company. His “nine virtues,” displayed prominently in the perpetuity wing, are presented as guiding principles but seem to be methods of control more than moral ideals. A painting of Kier “taming the tempers” in the perpetuity wing suggests that these virtues are tools of subjugation, indoctrinating employees into a cult-like reverence for Kier, and stamping out individuality.
7. Ambrose Egan, the “Black Sheep”
Ambrose Egan, known as the “black sheep” of the Egan family, stands out among Lumen’s leaders. His fall from favor within the family legacy suggests that Lumen has a darker history than we’re told. Ambrose’s separation from the family could imply rebellion against Lumen’s core philosophies. Does his story connect to the goats and sheep symbolism or hint at a deeper fracture within the Egan dynasty?
8. The Macrodata Refinement Team’s Unusual Task
The Macrodata Refinement team (MDR) spends its days sorting numbers with strange, emotional undertones. This bizarre, almost anthropomorphic relationship to data suggests a hidden purpose, possibly connected to environmental control or another project kept under wraps. This task might serve as a microcosm of Lumen’s larger manipulative tendencies, with its implications only scratching the surface of Lumen’s true operations.
9. The Old-Fashioned Technology
Lumen’s reliance on outdated tech like retro computers and fax machines seems out of place in a company with advanced severance technology. The office’s vintage tech isolates the innies from modern resources, restricting their access to information and further controlling their environment. This deliberate throwback style might limit curiosity, making employees more dependent on Lumen for knowledge.
10. The Interdepartmental Conflict
There’s an ongoing “departmental war” between groups like MDR and O&D, hinting at a past (or possibly ongoing) power struggle within Lumen. The tension is depicted in unsettling artwork, leading to speculation on whether this conflict was literal or part of Lumen’s psychological manipulation, aiming to keep employees divided and prevent any uprising.
11. The Reversibility of Severance
Contrary to Lumen’s claims, severance isn’t irreversible. Petey becomes the first to “unsever,” though his split mind struggles to reconcile memories from his two lives. The horror of Petey’s experience challenges Lumen’s narrative of severance’s permanence, suggesting that the company might be suppressing this truth to prevent rebellion or fear.
12. Lumen’s High-Level Connections
The revelation that a senator’s wife has undergone severance reveals Lumen’s high-level connections. If severance is already in use outside the Lumen office, it hints at a plan to normalize this technology across society. This ambition for societal reach could mean that Lumen’s endgame is far more pervasive, potentially reshaping the world as we know it.
13. The Curious Town of Mark’s Outie Life
Mark’s life outside Lumen feels meticulously controlled. His neighborhood, acquaintances, and even some relationships seem staged, as if Mark’s outie life is an extension of Lumen’s experiments. Mrs. Cobel’s role as his “neighbor” spying on him indicates that Lumen’s influence reaches far beyond the walls of its office.
14. Patton and Rebeck’s Unsettling Presence
Characters like Patton and Rebeck add to the mystery of Mark’s carefully orchestrated outie life. Patton’s Manchurian Candidate-like demeanor and Rebeck’s surgical scar suggest that they might be severed individuals, with roles in Mark’s life as part of Lumen’s broader experiment. Mark’s only genuine relationship could be with his sister, adding to the eerie isolation of his reality.
Severance teases viewers with more mysteries than it reveals. As we delve deeper into Lumen’s strange rituals, shadowy influence, and control over employees’ lives inside and outside the office, the show continues to provoke the question: how far does Lumen’s power truly extend? Each layer of secrecy hints that season two will uncover more about what Lumen—and the Egan family—are really hiding.