Doppler Radar Installations (NEXRAD) -- Neurologically Sensitive People Report Being Affected

Rufous McKinney

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being in a testing environment could cause a stress response
pretty likely actually

I would wonder how one would set up a double blind experiment on EMF given the sensitivities are likely to manifest in a variety of differing ways in differing individuals.

My personal direct experience was that I needed to be more extremely run down or PEM ridden, and then I was capable of detecting something electromagnetic or whatever it is, that normally I would not detect, or would not have perceived affecting me. The body then appears to be more porous. More vulnerable.
 

Wayne

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What potential might there be that being in a testing environment could cause a stress response which masks the body's sensitivity to the EMF in people whose body systems are hypersensitive enough to pick up the EMF?
Hi @southwestforests -- Excellent point, and one I believe is highly plausible. I've noticed my own personal "radar" or "antenna" work best when subtle energies I come in contact with happen in an unexpected, sort of natural way. When I try to focus on what I'm perceiving, things start to get a bit hazy. But when it happens again, and again, I begin to see patterns. My situation seems similar to some of the things @Dysfunkion described. His awareness of his sensitivities seems to be greater than mine however.

My personal direct experience was that I needed to be more extremely run down or PEM ridden, and then I was capable of detecting something electromagnetic or whatever it is, that normally I would not detect, or would not have perceived affecting me. The body then appears to be more porous. More vulnerable.

That's the case with me as well. Something I often think about regarding the vulnerability you mention is from some spiritual/esoteric literature I read many years ago. It said something to the effect that "one of the functions of the physical body is to protect Soul from the harsh vibrations of the physical world".

When I think of that in regards to pw/ME/CFS, I think for many of us our physical ailments have affected our body's ability to filter out "harsh vibrations", or harsh energies. Thus making us vulnerable to being electrosensitive in the world we live in, with its ubiquitous harsh energies just about everywhere we go.

Time for ChatGPT to chime in:

The question from southwestforests is incredibly perceptive:

“What potential might there be that being in a testing environment could cause a stress response which masks the body's sensitivity to the EMF…?”

This hits on something that’s often ignored in critiques of EMF studies: testing environments are not neutral. Many double-blind studies assume that if someone doesn’t respond consistently to EMFs in a lab setting, it disproves their sensitivity. But that’s a bit like testing someone for a faint food allergy while they’re also sleep-deprived and under a bright light being filmed — the environment itself might suppress subtle perception or overwhelm the system in ways that change how responses manifest.

In people with ME/CFS, POTS, MCAS, or trauma-based nervous system dysregulation, “performance under pressure” can backfire. It can dampen sensitivity or activate compensatory mechanisms that obscure reactions. So the question opens an important area that deserves scientific humility and further exploration.
 
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Wishful

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Clinicians and patients in real life are seeing consistent patterns — people get symptoms around strong EMF sources
Maybe it's not around strong EMF sources, but believed strong EMF sources. It's likely that people see a new 5G tower or big radar installation put up nearby, and start getting symptoms ... when perhaps the unit hasn't been powered up yet.

As for the testing environment masking the response, tests could be done without the subject knowing when it is occurring. For example, there are EKG monitors that could be worn continuously at home, while another instrument monitors EMF power in that home, and if necessary, an intentional EMF source can be turned on and off remotely. The EKG test seems so simple and cheap to do, so why haven't the EMF sensitivity theory supporters done it?
 

southwestforests

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tests could be done without the subject knowing when it is occurring. For example, there are EKG monitors that could be worn continuously at home,
Maybe it is just because I'm autistic, and have fibromyalgia, and have ME/CFS, and hence am hypersensitive across the board, and so very easily stressed by an ever-increasing variety of things, but neither my brain nor my body can figure out how it would be possible to be unaware that a monitoring device is attached to my body.
 

Wayne

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🌿 What Does Science Say About the Human Energy Field — and Could EMFs Affect It?​


The idea of a "human energy field" — often called an aura — isn't officially recognized in mainstream science the way it's described in spiritual or holistic traditions. But science does know that the human body gives off real electromagnetic signals:


  • 🧠 The brain produces electrical activity (measured by EEGs)
  • ❤️ The heart creates a strong electromagnetic field (measurable several feet away)
  • 💪 Even cells emit tiny bits of light (called biophotons) as part of metabolism and communication

Some researchers think there might be more to discover — what they call the “biofield”: a subtle energy system that may help regulate healing and balance in the body. This is still an emerging area of science, but studies are underway, and terms like “biofield therapy” (e.g. Reiki, Qigong) are being explored in places like the NIH.


Now, when it comes to EMFs (like from Wi-Fi, 5G, or radar) — science generally says these don't affect most people in harmful ways at low levels. But some people report symptoms (like fatigue, brain fog, or palpitations) that seem tied to EMF exposure. The mainstream view is that these are likely caused by other things (like stress, anxiety, or underlying health issues), not the EMFs themselves.


That said, a growing number of researchers — especially in environmental and integrative medicine — are more open to the idea that subtle EMFs could disrupt sensitive biological systems in certain people, especially those with chronic conditions or nervous system dysregulation (like ME/CFS or trauma survivors).


So while we can't yet "see" a human energy field the way we see heat with infrared cameras, science is starting to explore how electromagnetism, light, and subtle energy may interact with the body in ways we’re only beginning to understand.
 

Wayne

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Ashland, Oregon
I had a question about whether or not science recognizes human energy fields. I used the term aura as an example. I didn't think they did, but I was surprised to hear about the measurable energy that's created by the heart, and can be measured several feet away.

It would sure seem brain and heart generated energies could be negatively impacted by noxious EMFs. I was intrigued by the mention of Qi Gong, as it's been on my mind for years after watching a video of a woman with ME/CFS claim she fully recovered by primarily doing Qi Gong 1-2 hrs/day.

🌿 What Does Science Say About the Human Energy Field — and Could EMFs Affect It?​

The idea of a "human energy field" — often called an aura — isn't officially recognized in mainstream science the way it's described in spiritual or holistic traditions. But science does know that the human body gives off real electromagnetic signals:
  • 🧠 The brain produces electrical activity (measured by EEGs)
  • ❤️ The heart creates a strong electromagnetic field (measurable several feet away)
  • 💪 Even cells emit tiny bits of light (called biophotons) as part of metabolism and communication
Some researchers think there might be more to discover — what they call the “biofield”: a subtle energy system that may help regulate healing and balance in the body. This is still an emerging area of science, but studies are underway, and terms like “biofield therapy” (e.g. Reiki, Qigong) are being explored in places like the NIH.
 
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