Radio in ear?
Posted by:
Mislu
()
Date: February 07, 2010 05:10AM I know someone who hears radio signals in her ear. For some reason she keeps telling me about it, as she seems to think I know something about its cause and what, if anything can be done about it.
She has had significant amounts of dental work done, some of it very recently. I suspect that has a lot to do with it. I haven't clarified from her yet if it also includes ringing in the ear. (tinnitus) She also tends to experience a lot of supernatural events, most of which are negative. Not to mention shes a magnet for negative interactions with unstable people. I'm not so sure why that is, but in the year or so I have known her she has mentioned a lot of things. Which I usually roll my eyes and just think, 'oh boy what is it now?' Well, any suggestions I can pass on to her? I actually don't see her much these days, and I hope that things are looking better for her, but if I happen to see her I hope I can pass along some good advice. Thank you! Edited 1 time(s). Last edit at 02/07/2010 05:10AM by Mislu. Re: Radio in ear?
Posted by:
davidzanemason
()
Date: February 07, 2010 05:59AM We cannot always control what 'happens' to us. We can only control what we DO. Heh...heh.
SHE can see her doctor - or other specialists if she feels she has actual physical problems. Anyway, if she is happy with her life.....you should support her. If she is not happy, you should support her in any way to you can to support the solutions she has identified. -David Z. Mason WWW.RawFoodFarm.com Re: Radio in ear?
Posted by:
tropical
()
Date: February 09, 2010 12:09PM Another person with the same problem:
[answers.yahoo.com] If it happens when she's getting up or going to bed it's called Hypnagogia. [en.wikipedia.org] Sounds Hypnagogic imagery is often auditory or has an auditory component. Like the visuals, hypnagogic sounds vary in intensity from faint impressions to loud noises, such as crashes and bangs (exploding head syndrome). People may imagine their own name called or a doorbell ringing. Snatches of imagined speech are common. While typically nonsensical and fragmented, these speech events can occasionally strike the individual as apt comments on – or summations of – their thoughts at the time. They often contain word play, neologisms and made-up names. Hypnagogic speech may manifest as the subject’s own ‘inner voice’, or as the voices of others: familiar people or strangers. More rarely, poetry or music is heard.[27] And tooth fillings: [answers.google.com] It's real. I attended a Field Day setup a few years ago, staged by the Westside Amateur Radio Club in Los Angeles. They had one of their stations inside a trailer, and the radio had an automatic antenna tuner. Well, SOMEBODY didn't ground the thing right. I was inside the shack about 5' from the radio when the op said, "Well, 15 meters is dead; let's tune it up on 20." He changed bands and hit the deadly little "Automatic Tune" button. The radio began buzzing as the tuner went to work. Also, I let out a scream as one of my teeth with a nice filling in it suddenly felt like a dentist was drilling in it with NO anesthetic! I RAN from that trailer uttering obscenities and the pain vanished as soon as I got clear of the thing. Needless to say I didn't hang around that particular shack much during the rest of the contest. " -Dave WB6WKB Question In 1980, my husband and I sailed from New Zealand to Hawaii and back. Just the other day we confessed to each other that, on quiet nights in the middle of the ocean when there was very little wind and hence very little boat noise, we could hear voices coming from the mast. These voices would be both male and female but you couldn't make out what they were saying. We were both quite sober and were not under stress. Can anyone explain this? Our mast is aluminium and the stays are made of coiled wire. Jenny Pollock , Nelson, New Zealand Answers The ghostly voices were from short-wave radio stations--possibly quite a few of them overlapping. The mast and the rigging of a typical small boat are just about the right size to resonate at the frequency of a short-wave radio signal. If two items of metal are joined and there is some corrosion between them, the junction will act as a diode and "rectify" or demodulate the AM radio signal. This causes an audio-frequency current to flow in the metal. There are several mechanisms by which the audio-frequency signal could be converted into sound waves, including causing vibration of the rigging as the current interacts with the Earth's magnetic field. Sam Mulholland , Bristol The voices the couple heard were radio waves that were being picked up by the mast and stay arrangement. Either the mast or the hull was acting as the speaker. When I was a child, my family and I heard radio broadcasts at nights through our water heater. The pipes acted as the antenna and either the heater itself, or the small room it was in, acted as the speaker. George Siegenthaler , Norman Oklahoma During the Second World War the same phenomenon gave rise to many erroneous reports of the "foreign invaders" in areas of Britain close to short-wave transmitters. Strange voices in hedgerows at night were reported to the police or the Home Guard. On investigation it was found that modulated arcs on barbed-wire fences were picking up BBC World Service transmissions. Mike Wootton , Pattingham Staffordshire Back in the 1930s and 1940s a super-powerful AM transmitter was installed on an experimental basis in Texas. Local residents reported music coming from fence wire, bathtubs and even tooth fillings. Another true story involving radio waves: "Everyone has heard about receiving radio on your braces, or fillings or what not, and generally discounted it as an urban legend, right? Well, I'm here to tell you that it is possible. My wife, Janell, while needing a filling replaced (don't remember if it had dropped out or what) actually received radio signals in her head. It wasn't like anything you've heard were people could turn their head and get different channels. In fact, it couldn't really be understood at all, since it was quite muffled, but it was definitely a signal of some sort. We figured out that it was most likely something in the CB range rather than broadcast FM, though. And, it only did it a couple of times. Of course, then she went and got the filling replaced and that stopped it for good, so unfortuantely we couldn't experiment more with it, but it definitely makes a good story. :-) Radio waves can definitely be received on tooth fillings, however I would expect it to be AM radio waves only. This could be AM broadcast radio, or perhaps aircraft radio. Most two-way radios such as police, CB, and as you know ham radio*, uses FM. FM radio requires a much more complicated circuit to demodulate and it is very unlikely that a tooth filling would have exactly the right combination of silver amalgam filling (wire) and tooth (nonmetallic insulation) to simulate the proper circuit. However it is very simple to build an AM radio receiver out of just a few basic electronic parts that can do the job of demodulating the signal into sound waves, so I could understand how the tooth-filling would work." --Jeremy Edited 1 time(s). Last edit at 02/09/2010 12:10PM by tropical. Re: Radio in ear?
Posted by:
eaglefly
()
Date: February 09, 2010 03:08PM Not to sound glib about it,but is this womans name "Crystal".? Re: Radio in ear?
Posted by:
Mislu
()
Date: February 10, 2010 03:18AM No her name is not crystal, unless its a nick name I don't know about. I take it it sounds like her? Re: Radio in ear?
Posted by:
Mislu
()
Date: February 10, 2010 05:50AM Thats interesting, she does play violin.
Does anyone have any ideas about the ear problem and her supernatural experiences? And also her tendancy to attract back luck or bad encounters? That would be strange if they were all connected. Sorry, only registered users may post in this forum.
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