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People with schizophrenia can have delusions that seem bizarre, such as believing that neighbors can control their behavior with magnetic waves. They may also believe that people on television are directing special messages to them, or that radio stations are broadcasting their thoughts aloud to others ... They may have paranoid delusions and believe that others are trying to harm them, such as by cheating, harassing, poisoning, spying on, or plotting against them or the people they care about. These beliefs are called "delusions of persecution."
Some people develop a delusional idea to explain a hallucination they are having. For example, if they have heard voices describing their actions, they may have a delusion that someone is monitoring their actions. Someone experiencing a paranoid delusion may believe they are being harassed or persecuted. They may believe they are being chased, followed, watched, plotted against or poisoned, often by a family member or friend.
This thread might sound super-paranoid but it is real. There are others on Youtube who seem to have a similar problem.
Schizophrenia affects about 24 million people wordwide. Schizophrenia is a treatable disorder, treatment being more effective in its initial stages. More than 50% of persons with schizophrenia are not receiving appropriate care.
... Certain drugs, particularly cannabis, cocaine, LSD or amphetamines, may trigger some symptoms of schizophrenia, especially in people who are susceptible. Using amphetamines or cocaine can lead to psychosis and can cause a relapse in people recovering from an earlier episode.
"listen in" on my thoughts by pointing a beam of some kind of radiation
They could be using Extra Low Frequencies or on the other end, microwaves
This thread might sound super-paranoid but it is real. There are others on Youtube who seem to have a similar problem. I have a former neighbor who has been using radio frequencies to eavesdrop on me. They can "listen in" on my thoughts by pointing a beam of some kind of radiation into my room and at my head. (I know this is real. There are things that they know about me that there is no way they could know.) They could be using Extra Low Frequencies or on the other end, microwaves. Is there anyone out there who knows how to detect Extra Low Frequencies. And also how to block it? A faraday cage is beyond my budget limit. I think they are using Ultra Low Frequencies because the former neighbor was in the Navy. He attended the Naval Nuclear Power School back in the 80s. ULF would be used by the navy to communicate with other subs because salt water would make it impossible for the radio waves to travel. Any help would be greatly appreciated.
... In my opinion, mind reading is normal ...
Quote from: evan_au on 09/02/2014 03:04:35... In my opinion, mind reading is normal ...The OP, rubystreet, was saying they believed their neighbour could "listen in" to their thoughts via a beam of radiation pointed at their head, not via sound , (what they've said), or vision , (their facial expression / body-language) . Such " newbielink:https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thought_broadcasting [nonactive]" delusions are typical in newbielink:https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Schizophreniform_disorder [nonactive]. IMO Rubystreet should discuss this matter with their doctor ASAP, rather than consider this delusional belief "normal". It would be possible for neighbours to actually overhear ones conversations and possibly intercept ones e-mail, (via newbielink:http://www.pcworld.com/article/2043095/heres-what-an-eavesdropper-sees-when-you-use-an-unsecured-wi-fi-hotspot.html [nonactive]) , but it is completely impossible for a neighbour to perform what amounts to telepathy-type mind-reading.
How the f**k would you know anything about it? ...
Thought broadcasting is considered a positive symptom of schizophrenia. Thought broadcasting has been suggested as one of the so-called "first rank symptoms" (Schneider's first-rank symptoms) believed to distinguish schizophrenia from other psychotic disorders.
Here are some links for more info: ... http://www.greatdreams.com/RNM.htm
A couple of your links lead to a case John St. Clair Akwei vs. NSA. There is very little additional info about the case online ...
... apparently Filed on 02/20/92 and Dismissed on 03/09/92 with no basis for the claims.
These [Extra Low] frequencies can pinpoint a target anywhere on Earth and can penetrate water, rock, concrete and other dense matter.
Satellite-delivered (ELF) Extra Low Frequencies to communicate voice-to-skull transmissions.
Am I the target of Remote Neural Monitoring?
... others may see patterns in random events ...
The term is attributed to Klaus Conrad by Peter Brugger, who defined it as the "unmotivated seeing of connections" accompanied by a "specific experience of an abnormal meaningfulness" ... apophany does not provide insight into the true nature of reality or its interconnectedness, but is a "process of repetitively and monotonously experiencing abnormal meanings in the entire surrounding experiential field",
I think are brains are wired to look for patterns and pay attention to coincidences, because sometimes they are significant. It reminds me of a certain kind of coincidence, which coincidentally, my daughter mentioned the other day. She said "Have you ever been reading something, and the second you get to a word or phrase on the page, someone in the room or on TV says the exact same thing?" Which has happened to me, and it does feel weird. "How does that happen?" she asked. I said, "I guess if you're an avid reader, and reading 1000s of words every day, and there's usually someone in the room, or a tv or a radio on in the back ground, there's bound to be a match up eventually." But it is like the word or phrase just pops out at you, where as it would have flowed right past, hardly registering, without the pairing.