Have You Seen The Sage Room?

The Floorplan Is Missing functions as the public intake portal for the Global Recurrent Environment Dream Study (GREDS), cataloguing recurring spatial dream environments collectively referred to as the “Sage Room.”

Every night, in locations all over the world, people report being drawn to a particular room in their sleep. Its presentation varies: an attic, the lobby of an aging hotel, a shed with a broken roof, a childhood bedroom that hasn't existed for years.

Subjects rarely remain in the room for long. They describe an implicit limit, as if they are not permitted to stay, but are allowed just enough time to register some of its details. No two descriptions are exactly alike. The dimensions, finishes, furnishings, and apparent function of the space differ from subject to subject. In all cases, once the dream has been had, it will continue. Ad infinitum. The one thing that all those afflicted have so far confirmed is that throughout their dreams, this room is always referred to as, "The Sage Room." This repeated experience almost always sparks a dangerous obsession with many of our distressed subjects.

We refer to this as the Recurring Room phenomenon. It appears to be persistent, targeted, and—within the limits of our data so far—relentless in its attempts to summon certain individuals back to itself, based upon their compulsion when waking.

If you have found this page, you may already be part of that pattern.

We have decided to extend this study out to the public in hopes of gathering data on this phenomenon. This project collects accounts and related experiences from people who believe they have encountered the same room. If you recognize what is described here, please share what you have seen below.

Recent Anonymous Reports
CLR-GREDS-INT-25-072
“My late wife's office. I hated that place. The ceiling tiles pulsed like they were breathing. When I looked away, the doorway had moved all the way into the left corner of the room. She told me she'd wait for me in the Sage Room.”

Partial or fragmented recall is acceptable. Any details you remember — even colors, textures, or a single object — contribute to ongoing pattern analysis.

Share Your Encounter

Study Status

Public Registry

The registry reflects preliminary, anonymized pattern metrics. Supplemental materials may be excluded from indexing for participant safety.

Active cases
65
Rolling 90-day window
Regions reporting naming persistence
12
Self-reported, unverified
Wake distress carryover
Low-Moderate
Self-reported next-day impairment
Last registry refresh
2025-12-01
Automated publish