dreamosis
26th February 2010, 08:58 PM
In the next few weeks I may be getting involved in a psychic attack situation.
The last time I got involved in one, which was 2007, I came away with regrets. I felt I hadn't done enough and that I unskillfully established a dependence between me and the attackee. It seriously disrupted a life-long friendship. (A good friend of mine was dating the attackee).
So, needless to say, I'm weighing exactly how I get involved.
I remember reading Dion Fortune's Psychic Self-Defense in 2007. I read Robert Bruce's book, too; but there was advice in Fortune's book that stuck with me. She recommended ensuring that the attackee see a medical doctor, a psychologist, and two indepedent psychics, if possible, so that as someone assisting the attackee, you understand the situation from all angles. Of course this process was recommended, too, in order to verify that psychic attack is indeed what's happening.
Fortunately for me, the attackee (a family member) has been evaluated by a medical doctor and a couple of psychiatrists now. The feedback my family has gotten from the doctors could fully explain the symptoms.
The possible psychic attack symptoms include: sudden mood swings, seeing "demons," extremely macabre visions on the edge of sleep, and seemingly uncharacteristic aggression and violence.
Medical evaluation, and intervention, has brought out the following: (1) she's sleep-deprived, sometimes staying awake for several days in a row; (2) a diagnosis of bipolar disorder; (3) a diagnosis of schizo-affective disorder; (4) possible sexual abuse in the past. The medical doctor is of the opinion that her sleeplessness could explain most, if not all, of her mental disturbance. Sleep deprivation is serious. The psychiatrists' diagnoses have somewhat disagreed. She's really only been manic; she hasn't been depressed. The psychological evaluation is consistent, though, in naming her psychotic (in that she's seeing things that "aren't there.")
She's been withholding about what exactly has been going on. Earlier in the week, after I told her about a few of my own experiences with sleep paralysis and bad visions and Negs, she mentioned something about a "black widow lady." She wasn't open to talking.
My gut says, if there's a Neg involved, that it's an astral spider. I'm uncertain exactly how much psychic attack is a factor in the overall situation, though. It could be that the attachment is negligible, but that its effect is enhanced by the other problems.
Back in 2007 I faced the same question -- the question of "How much of this is psychic attack and how much of it is underlying normal psychological problems?" On one level, I know it doesn't matter. The way in which it does matter, to me, though is in whether or not I decide to talk to her directly about the possibility of psychic attack. Will I only make it worse if I do? Will I make her more paranoid? She's already obsessively concerned about "Nazis," whether she'll be attractive anymore to a girl she likes, about the evil media, about the state of the world... She rails or cries about all these things.
And there's a bigger question to me, right now, of in any psychic attack situation how you discuss it without making the attackee more frightened? That is, if they're a generally anxious person, predisposed to paranoia, or uninformed about the whole subject...
The last time I got involved in one, which was 2007, I came away with regrets. I felt I hadn't done enough and that I unskillfully established a dependence between me and the attackee. It seriously disrupted a life-long friendship. (A good friend of mine was dating the attackee).
So, needless to say, I'm weighing exactly how I get involved.
I remember reading Dion Fortune's Psychic Self-Defense in 2007. I read Robert Bruce's book, too; but there was advice in Fortune's book that stuck with me. She recommended ensuring that the attackee see a medical doctor, a psychologist, and two indepedent psychics, if possible, so that as someone assisting the attackee, you understand the situation from all angles. Of course this process was recommended, too, in order to verify that psychic attack is indeed what's happening.
Fortunately for me, the attackee (a family member) has been evaluated by a medical doctor and a couple of psychiatrists now. The feedback my family has gotten from the doctors could fully explain the symptoms.
The possible psychic attack symptoms include: sudden mood swings, seeing "demons," extremely macabre visions on the edge of sleep, and seemingly uncharacteristic aggression and violence.
Medical evaluation, and intervention, has brought out the following: (1) she's sleep-deprived, sometimes staying awake for several days in a row; (2) a diagnosis of bipolar disorder; (3) a diagnosis of schizo-affective disorder; (4) possible sexual abuse in the past. The medical doctor is of the opinion that her sleeplessness could explain most, if not all, of her mental disturbance. Sleep deprivation is serious. The psychiatrists' diagnoses have somewhat disagreed. She's really only been manic; she hasn't been depressed. The psychological evaluation is consistent, though, in naming her psychotic (in that she's seeing things that "aren't there.")
She's been withholding about what exactly has been going on. Earlier in the week, after I told her about a few of my own experiences with sleep paralysis and bad visions and Negs, she mentioned something about a "black widow lady." She wasn't open to talking.
My gut says, if there's a Neg involved, that it's an astral spider. I'm uncertain exactly how much psychic attack is a factor in the overall situation, though. It could be that the attachment is negligible, but that its effect is enhanced by the other problems.
Back in 2007 I faced the same question -- the question of "How much of this is psychic attack and how much of it is underlying normal psychological problems?" On one level, I know it doesn't matter. The way in which it does matter, to me, though is in whether or not I decide to talk to her directly about the possibility of psychic attack. Will I only make it worse if I do? Will I make her more paranoid? She's already obsessively concerned about "Nazis," whether she'll be attractive anymore to a girl she likes, about the evil media, about the state of the world... She rails or cries about all these things.
And there's a bigger question to me, right now, of in any psychic attack situation how you discuss it without making the attackee more frightened? That is, if they're a generally anxious person, predisposed to paranoia, or uninformed about the whole subject...