Act 1 Eternal Sunshine -
“They say the opposite of love is indifference / But the opposite of us is evidence / I kept the receipts, the flight logs, the bite marks / Now I’m just a curator of a closed-down dark.”
Cleo returns to her apartment. She opens a drawer she was told never to open (the instruction was erased, but the muscle memory remains). Inside: a single polaroid. The face is scratched out with a black marker. On the back, in her own handwriting: “You chose to forget. Do not regret.” act 1 eternal sunshine
The act spans approximately 35–40 minutes. It begins in the cold, sterile aftermath of a breakup and ends at the precipice of a dangerous choice. The sonic palette is intentionally jarring: warm, nostalgic R&B loops degrade into glitching electronics; acoustic guitars are slowly reversed and submerged under water; vocal harmonies arrive fragmented, like memories fighting for air. SCENE 1: “ZERO SUM” (The Opening) Setting: A white, minimalist apartment at 3:00 AM. Rain against a floor-to-ceiling window. The protagonist, CLEO (she/her, 28) , sits alone on a bare mattress. Her phone glows with a text she has typed and deleted seventeen times. “They say the opposite of love is indifference
Explodes in white light. A sound like a glass cathedral shattering. Then—absolute silence. SCENE 5: “ETERNAL SUNSHINE (TITLE TRACK)” Setting: Post-procedure. Cleo wakes up in the same white apartment from Scene 1. The rain has stopped. The sun is rising. She looks at her phone. The text she typed and deleted is gone. She doesn’t remember the fight. She doesn’t remember the love. The face is scratched out with a black marker
"What if you woke up and the scar was gone, but so was the story of how you got it?" I. THE PREMISE OF THE ACT Act 1, titled Eternal Sunshine , serves as the dramatic exposition of a two-act psychological pop-opera. It draws direct thematic inspiration from the 2004 film Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind —specifically the Lacuna procedure (memory erasure)—but recontextualizes it for a modern relationship in the public eye. This act is not about falling in love; it is about falling out of memory . It asks a brutal question: If you could erase every trace of a toxic love, would you be free—or hollow?
A sample of a car commercial jingle from 2019 (their song?) chopped and screwed. A 909 drum machine with a missing snare—off-kilter, yearning.

