“Memories light the corners of my mind… misty, water-colored memories of the way we were…”
It pains me to say that I am dealing with short-term memory issues due to my daily dose of microwaves, including those administered when I am knocked out by them. For instance, I didn’t remember my phone number a few weeks ago and have had trouble remembering things I have worked on at work – both odd for me, as I normally have great memory and usually do not need to write things down. I have woken up to nasty headaches, feeling like my brain is jiggling inside my head, searing scalp pain, dry hair at the base of my head in spite of wearing a moisturizing hair mask for hours and NOT washing it off and caking my hair in coconut oil. Being in my 30s and in overall good health, it is unlikely this is occurring naturally. In fact I have gone to neurologists and dermatologists, who cannot state a biological medical reason for my symptoms based on their patient experience.
According to the American Cancer Society, “if RF radiation is absorbed in large enough amounts by materials containing water, such as food, fluids, and body tissues, it can produce heat. This can lead to burns and tissue damage.” This is probably what is behind these injuries to my face and arms, which look like cellulite or stretch marks.
There is also research that indicates microwaves can cause memory loss. One study notes: “The damaging effects of MW radiation on the brain include brain dysfunction and brain structural damage. An epidemiological survey found that MW radiation caused human fatigue, headache, excitement, dreams, memory loss and other symptoms of neurasthenia.” Another study notes that “Mechanisms underlying learning and memory are damaged by microwave irradiation.”
Common issues following microwave exposure include insomnia, headache, fatigue/tirednesss, depression, vision/hearing/olfactory dysfunction, concentration/attention/cognitive dysfunction, dizziness/vertigo, memory changes, restlessness/anxiety, irritability, loss of appetite/body weight, skin tingling/burning/inflammation and nausea. I can say I have experienced most of these at some point in time since this type of harassment began.
It’s important to note, though, that research is still evolving, as a recent report published by the Scientific Committee on Emerging and Newly Identified Health Risks (SCENIHR) noted that discussions about the thermal and non-thermal effects are misleading. The report notes that as microwave frequencies are high enough that the energy is absorbed, the heating of tissue that results becomes its major mechanism, and most biochemical and physiological responses are temperature-dependent. So there is much we don’t yet know or understand about the health effects of microwaves. In my opinion, this is why medical professionals and scientists are in disagreement about the recent attacks on the U.S. embassies in China and Cuba.