Fabula
S6E5 · Schisms
S6E5
· Schisms

Geordi’s VISOR malfunction triggers medical exit

After investigating sabotage in the cargo bay’s sensor array, Geordi La Forge experiences a sudden, unexplained VISOR malfunction—first a sharp pain, then a creeping anxiety—that disrupts his focus mid-scan. His physical distress escalates from technical frustration to visceral discomfort, forcing him to abandon the integrity scan and seek immediate medical attention. The abruptness of his departure leaves Data to complete the critical work alone, while Geordi’s symptoms (linked to the sensor modifications and recurring crew nightmares) hint at a deeper, unresolved connection to the alien subspace experiments. The moment underscores the crew’s shared vulnerability and the escalating threat to their physiological and psychological stability, with Geordi’s exit marking a turning point in the investigation’s urgency.

Plot Beats

The narrative micro-steps within this event

1

Geordi experiences a sharp pain in his VISOR and a wave of unexplained anxiety, forcing him to seek medical attention. Data remains to perform the integrity scan, and as Geordi exits, the scene shifts the focus to Data alone in Cargo Bay.

inquiry to unease

Who Was There

Characters present in this moment

2

Curious but emotionally neutral; his concern for Geordi is intellectual, not visceral

Data stands at the free-standing console, his fingers poised over the controls as Geordi’s distress unfolds. His initial curiosity ('What is it?') is clinical, but his follow-up ('Are you alright, Geordi?') reveals a nascent understanding of human emotional cues—though his tone remains measured. When Geordi departs, Data seamlessly transitions to the structural integrity scan, his logic unshaken by the interruption. Yet, the scene’s tension lies in what Data doesn’t do: he doesn’t question the anomaly further, doesn’t alert security, and doesn’t pursue Geordi to Sickbay. His compliance with protocol in this moment underscores the crew’s fragmented response to the crisis, where even Data’s infallible analysis is no match for an enemy that targets the intangible.

Goals in this moment
  • Complete the structural integrity scan to ensure the conduit’s stability (as delegated by Geordi)
  • Document Geordi’s VISOR malfunction for later analysis (implied by his observational nature)
Active beliefs
  • Geordi’s symptoms are an isolated technical issue (not yet connected to the broader alien threat)
  • His own analytical capabilities are sufficient to address the immediate problem
Character traits
Analytically detached (prioritizes task completion over emotional inquiry) Adaptive (immediately assumes Geordi’s responsibilities) Observant of human behavior (notices Geordi’s distress but lacks deeper empathy) Protocol-driven (follows orders without deviation)
Follow Data (possessed …'s journey
Supporting 1

Wearily resolute, but unknowingly absent during a critical moment of crew fragility

Commander Riker has already exited the Cargo Bay by the time Geordi’s VISOR malfunction occurs, but his earlier exchange with Geordi—marked by shared exhaustion and the unspoken weight of their recent investigations—lingers in the air. Riker’s departure leaves Geordi without immediate command oversight, reinforcing the isolation of this moment. His yawn and Riker’s reciprocal acknowledgment of fatigue ('the past few nights... it's time to get up again') foreshadow the crew’s collective vulnerability, but it’s Geordi who now bears the brunt of the unseen threat. Riker’s absence here is telling: the first officer’s leadership is tested not just by external enemies, but by the erosion of his crew’s stability from within.

Goals in this moment
  • Ensure the sensor array remains offline until fully investigated (delegated to Geordi/Data)
  • Maintain crew cohesion amid growing fatigue and unexplained disturbances
Active beliefs
  • The crew’s exhaustion is a temporary byproduct of the mission’s demands (not yet linked to the alien threat)
  • Geordi and Data are capable of handling technical anomalies without direct supervision
Character traits
Perceptive of crew morale Physically exhausted (implied by dialogue) Delegative (trusts Geordi/Data to handle technical crises) Empathetic (acknowledges shared fatigue)
Follow William Riker's journey

Objects Involved

Significant items in this scene

4
Geordi's Tricorder

Geordi’s tricorder is clutched in his hand as the VISOR malfunction strikes, but it becomes a useless tool in this moment. Unlike the sensor array or the console, the tricorder offers no answers—it can’t scan the alien interference, can’t diagnose Geordi’s anxiety, and can’t alert the crew to the subspace experiments. Its presence is a cruel irony: Geordi, the engineer who relies on his tools to navigate the unknown, is now confronted with a threat that defies his technology. The tricorder’s silence mirrors the crew’s growing helplessness.

Before: Active in Geordi’s hand, used to trace circuitry …
After: Left behind in the Cargo Bay as Geordi …
Before: Active in Geordi’s hand, used to trace circuitry and scan for structural weaknesses
After: Left behind in the Cargo Bay as Geordi exits; its diagnostic capabilities are irrelevant to the alien threat
Cargo Bay Four Bulkhead Access Panel to EPS Circuitry

The opened bulkhead panel and its exposed circuitry are the physical manifestation of the crew’s investigation, but they also serve as a metaphor for their exposure to the alien threat. Geordi’s tricorder scan of the panel is cut short by his VISOR malfunction, leaving the circuitry—and the crew’s understanding of the sabotage—unresolved. The panel’s tangled wires reflect the narrative’s own tangled threads: the crew is piecing together clues, but the bigger picture remains obscured. The panel’s role in this event is to highlight the crew’s limited visibility, both literally (Geordi can’t finish his scan) and thematically (they don’t yet see the alien experiments).

Before: Pried open, circuitry exposed and scanned by Geordi’s …
After: Unchanged physically, but its significance is overshadowed by …
Before: Pried open, circuitry exposed and scanned by Geordi’s tricorder; evidence of sabotage
After: Unchanged physically, but its significance is overshadowed by Geordi’s collapse and the looming subspace threat
Cargo Bay Four Free-Standing Console (USS Enterprise-D)

The free-standing console becomes Data’s sole focus after Geordi’s departure, its screens displaying structural integrity data as he takes over the scan. The console is a symbol of the crew’s reliance on technology and protocol, but it’s also a limitation: it can’t process the alien threat, can’t comfort Geordi, and can’t warn the crew of the impending rupture. Data’s interaction with the console is methodical, but the console itself is passive, unable to initiate action or provide the insights the crew desperately needs. Its humming presence underscores the crew’s isolation in this moment.

Before: Active, displaying structural integrity data as Data and …
After: Continues to function, but Data’s work on it …
Before: Active, displaying structural integrity data as Data and Geordi collaborate
After: Continues to function, but Data’s work on it is now solitary and potentially futile given the unseen threat
La Forge Sensor Array (Hardware)

The La Forge Sensor Array is mentioned in passing as the catalyst for the investigation, but its physical presence in the Cargo Bay is tangential to this event. Its role here is symbolic: a reminder of the crew’s technical prowess and their vulnerability to sabotage. The array’s offline status, as ordered by Riker, creates a false sense of control—Geordi and Data are treating symptoms (the EPS explosion, the conduit weakness) while the real threat (the alien subspace experiments) operates beneath their sensors. The array’s absence from the scene underscores the crew’s blindness to the true nature of the crisis.

Before: Offline (per Riker’s orders), but its recent activation …
After: Remains offline; Data’s structural integrity scan is a …
Before: Offline (per Riker’s orders), but its recent activation and subsequent sabotage are the focus of the investigation
After: Remains offline; Data’s structural integrity scan is a stopgap measure, not a solution to the deeper problem

Location Details

Places and their significance in this event

2
Deck Thirteen

The Cargo Bay is a liminal space in this event: neither the sterile safety of Sickbay nor the command authority of the bridge, but a no-man’s-land where technical investigations and personal vulnerabilities collide. The bay’s vastness and the hum of the console create an eerie contrast to Geordi’s sudden distress, amplifying the isolation of his experience. The location’s functional role—as a site for engineering tasks and storage—is undermined by the alien threat, turning it into a stage for the crew’s unraveling. The Cargo Bay’s mood is one of creeping unease, where the ordinary (circuitry scans, structural integrity checks) is interrupted by the extraordinary (Geordi’s collapse, the unseen enemy).

Atmosphere Tense and claustrophobic, despite the bay’s spaciousness; the hum of the console and the exposed …
Function Investigation site and technical workspace, but also a space where the crew’s psychological fragility is …
Symbolism Represents the crew’s false sense of control (they believe they’re investigating a sabotage, not realizing …
Access Restricted to authorized personnel (crew with clearance), but the true restriction is the crew’s limited …
The exposed circuitry in the bulkhead panel, casting jagged shadows The hum of the free-standing console, a steady but ominous backdrop The dim, functional lighting of the Cargo Bay, accentuating the isolation of the moment The absence of other crew members, leaving Data and Geordi alone with the problem
USS Enterprise-D

Sickbay is invoked as Geordi’s destination, a refuge from the unseen threat, but its role in this event is anticipatory. The mention of Sickbay (‘I think I’d better get to Sickbay…’) frames it as a place of potential answers, but also as a last resort. The location’s symbolic significance lies in its contrast to the Cargo Bay: where the bay is a space of action and investigation, Sickbay is a space of passivity and diagnosis. Geordi’s decision to seek it out suggests that the crew’s problems are no longer technical but biological—a shift that will define the rest of the episode. The atmosphere of Sickbay, though not shown, is implied to be clinical and sterile, a stark counterpoint to the Cargo Bay’s mechanical tension.

Atmosphere Not directly shown, but implied to be clinical, sterile, and focused on healing (a contrast …
Function Potential sanctuary and diagnostic hub for Geordi’s VISOR malfunction and psychological distress
Symbolism Represents the crew’s transition from technical problem-solving to confronting a biological/psychological threat
Access Restricted to medical personnel and patients (Geordi’s access is implied by his role as an …
The glow of diagnostic consoles (implied, not shown) The hum of biobeds (implied, not shown) Beverly Crusher’s presence (implied, as the ship’s chief medical officer)

Narrative Connections

How this event relates to others in the story

What led here 3
Causal

"The sensor array modification ends up triggering Geordi's anxiety/VISOR malfunction and Data experiencing a memory loss, solidifying the link between the modification and crew distress."

Riker approves risky sensor enhancement
S6E5 · Schisms
Causal

"The sensor array modification ends up triggering Geordi's anxiety/VISOR malfunction and Data experiencing a memory loss, solidifying the link between the modification and crew distress."

Riker approves risky sensor enhancement
S6E5 · Schisms
Causal

"The sensor array modification ends up triggering Geordi's anxiety/VISOR malfunction and Data experiencing a memory loss, solidifying the link between the modification and crew distress."

Data reminds Riker of poetry reading
S6E5 · Schisms

Key Dialogue

"GEORDI: This is the second time today my VISOR's cut out..."
"GEORDI: I don't know... I just had a weird feeling... I think I'd better get to Sickbay..."
"DATA: I will run the integrity scan."