“Limbo,” the opening chapter of a trilogy after “Trauma,” unveils a hidden world in the city’s silent hours, between 1 and 4 AM, where the essence of limbo takes form. Limbo here is not just a place but a state a fragile threshold where a sub-society hovers, caught between two chapters of existence, neither rooted in the past nor stepping into the future. It is a space of eternal waiting, where time stretches thin, and the next moment remains a shadow on the horizon, undefined and unreachable. These people, suspended in this in-between, embody the very nature of limbo: a realm where certainty dissolves, and the soul wrestles with the unknown, teetering on the edge of what was and what might be. The photographs, steeped in a sickly green glow that reeks of poison and decay, mirror this uncertainty, casting a toxic veil over a world that cannot move forward or backward. The green hue, far from symbolizing life, whispers of a tainted atmosphere a noxious fog that chokes the air, reflecting the inner decay of a purgatory where hope struggles to breathe. “Limbo” reveals the concept and unease of this poisoned in between a place where life pauses, where the human spirit lingers in quiet unrest, seeking meaning in the void of transition.