Gently Rapping At My Chamber Door

Once upon a midnight dreary, while I pondered, weak and weary,
Over many a quaint and curious volume of forgotten lore—
While I nodded, nearly napping, suddenly there came a tapping,
As of some one gently rapping, rapping at my chamber door.
“’Tis some visitor,” I muttered, “tapping at my chamber door—
Only this and nothing more.”

So in late 2023, I was sleeping under a lead dental blanket to attenuate the vibration beam, which my technical harassment has been delivering probably going back to 2016 or 2017. I didn’t write about it initially, because saying you are being vibrated sounded so strange. Burned, shocked, impacted, it would sound sane, compared to saying your body is being vibrated at exactly 4 hertz by some technology being wielded by domestic intelligence. This was all long before the Havana Syndrome went public, and spies and diplomats reported one element of The Beam was that it vibrated their body somehow.

The lead dental blanket stops your body from vibrating, however as you lay there, you could feel the blanket vibrating. I noted this to others n my website, who reported the same thing. It appears surveillance was able to use this, to create targeted pulses to the lead blanket. I first thought it was some sort of particle beam spattering particles onto the lead blanket. I recorded what it sounded like here, in this recording. At 27 seconds, it sounded like a particle hit the microphone of the phone:

I was vaguely worried the particles, which target the head, might be making it through the lead blanket and taking out some brain matter, like a proton beam is used to destroy tumors. Then things accelerated. I wrote this blog post on that site at the time, and have transferred it here as part of my documentation of the American Stasi’s activities.

Background. I am laying in a space behind a stone fireplace, on the floor, on couch cushions to sleep, since it seems the spot most protected from the neighbor’s houses. About a foot and a half over me is the steel door of an old freezer, thick as can be, laid horizontal on supports, to degrade any particle beam coming from above somehow. Over the door, I’ve laid a lead dental blanket, and over that, another floor of the house. Under the freezer door, I lay, one lead dental blanket, doubled, over my head. I am on my side. Over that, a Diamond Craft large fry pan, stainless steel, bottom up, probably 14 inches across, protecting my head. I am using the steel frypan, as I am concerned some particles from what I thought was a particle beam might be making it through the lead blankets, which are just powdered lead embedded in silicone sheeting.

It sounds ridiculous, I know. I once led a “normal” blind life like you. But then I encountered the American Stasi’s technical harassment division. They pissed me off, so I rebelled, they accelerated, and I responded in kind. We have been going back and forth for a while, and now, when in this situation, you do what you have to.

Two more dental blankets covering me entirely over all of that, single layer thick, one high on the upper body one low over the lower body, as I lay under the door, which is about a foot and a half over me. Over the fry pan, below the top lead dental blanket sheet, a smart phone was left, to record the impacts on my head.

I felt the taps, which were captured on the frypan, and went no deeper. You could hear them clearly. (There is a video here by Dr Katherine Horton, an Oxford Trained PhD in particle physics, where at 7:28 you can hear the sound of an impact from this exact weapon on a baking pan she is trying to shield herself with), Maybe they were tapping the pan instead of me purposely, maybe even laughing, I do not know if they could have gotten through it. I was laughing inside, as I could feel frustration in the taps as I ignored them. The taps increased, the very last one was a surprise, as it felt like about twenty pounds of pressure, pressing, (not slamming) my head into the pillow, and sliding the fry pan and doubled lead blanket off my face somewhat. I think the first swoosh you hear is actually that push acting on the microphone, or some field effect around the push acting on the phone’s microphone.

I exploded up throwing everything off with an almost instinctual feeling someone was on top of me, and we were about to fight. As everything fell away, nobody was there.

The quiet reverberations for the first two minutes of the recording are the scanning vibrations/electricity. I think they are mapping out exactly where I am. It was silent in the room for me at that point, so I heard nothing, though my whole body was bathed in an electricity sensation. Tapping starts quietly at two minutes, and gets louder at the end. Best listened to with headphones, and the volume as high as it will go. Be warned, it gets loud at the end as I throw everything, including the frypan off, to fight:

I wish I had not jumped up, to see where it was going next, and how hard the tech could have pushed, but between the demon-like feeling of a poltergeist, the possibility this might not be human tech with the UAP/CIA phenomenon lately, and the possibility somebody had actually snuck in while I was under all that stuff, I did break first. I mean it was like seeing a ghost. It could even have been demonic, and demonic is some kind of interdimensional alien tech in reality. Even though it is only humans using some kind of advanced harassment technology, it feels like that, and in the moment, it was exhilarating.

Bonus footage, the end of a nap on Christmas eve afternoon, 2023, on a recliner, recorded in Thermal. my head is up and to the right under a lead dental blanket,  which comes up over my head, and back under it. I am on my side, facing the right. Another blanket is over my legs. Over the lead dental blanket I have taped a sheet of aluminum foil, on top of seven or eight paper towels, to insulate it from the heat of the lead dental blanket. The heat is down in the house to make the whole thing tolerable, and so the aluminum foil is cooler on the thermal video. I was hit with the spattering, which is rapid tapping, for the last few seconds, right over the foil. Since I had no hard metal under the tapping/spattering, I got up immediately, because at that point I felt it likely some particles were making it through the lead blanket. You will see the energy, from the beam which delivers the spattering effect, heat the foil.

Watch the foil, starting at about 8:20 (I made it that long so you could see how long it was static, and cool, and that the heating was unusual) The video went longer, I threw the blanket off, but I cut it there, for obvious reasons:

I will tell you now, if they punched through steel sheeting with Bill Binney, and I have no doubt they did, you have some entity which can move anywhere undetected, and drop a death blow on anyone, including the President, on White House grounds. And there is really nothing you can do. I have thermal camera on the outside of the house, and I do not see anything out there, so this is most likely coming from the “empty” neighbor’s house behind me.

The bright side is, by the fact they haven’t done this to me until now, I am thinking they don’t have many pulse/particle beams to deploy.

Final observations for those who come after. The little taps happen fast, and can approach a spattering sound. I would believe it is a high energy particle moving at near light speed. As they hit harder though, it slows down. “Putt”s feel like a BB at maybe 200 fps. Tapping feels like it is being done with fingers, slightly slowly, with a push at the end. The push of my face into the pillow felt like an older brother putting his hand on my chin and pushing my face into the pillow playfully. Maybe they can adjust all of it, and were trying to not kill me, but were just screwing with me, I do not know.

There is also a strange feel to the impact as if gets bigger, like a blob of gravity molasses, almost a field effect, like a big blob of force dropping like molasses, and it extended through the frying pan and I could feel it in my cheek/jaw, separate from the impact, like a molasses wave permeating into the tissue and bone, driving it. It did not feel like a particle or object impact. My jaw felt odd for a few hours after it, on that side, like it had inflamed the bone. But after a few hours it was gone.

The tapping was also extraordinarily precise, like this time, maybe half-inch groups, if that.

I suspect this is often used as assassination tech, applied to hearts or brains. I have already felt the impacts inside my abdomen in one instance, so it turns out they can make those pops inside the body.

UPDATE: One of our commenters, who does analysis of radio frequency emissions, analyzed the files, and had the following to say in our comments:

Is it possible to get copies of these sound recordings?
I have a technical background and it would be interesting to see the waveforms in time and their spectral content.
I understand remaining anonymous. And I understand if that makes it impossible to share data.

This is interesting and a bit surprising.
Here is the time series of your first recording.
You’re sampling at 44.1 kHz.
I didn’t play individual segments of interest to try to isolate anything. It’s just something to look at to get an idea of these pulses.

Here is the power spectrum (power of different frequencies in the signal).
Look at that structure there. That’s very very unusual in my experience. You have a very regular evenly spaced spikes across the frequency band, up to practically 20 kHz. That’s not natural. It’s what you see in spread spectrum communications or radar/sonar playing clever being just single “pings”.
I don’t want to read more than just initial surprise here because very often once you dig into things more there is a good explanation. But this is genuinely unusual.
It could be an artefact of how I’m generating the spectrum, but I’m using a standard and robust Welch method. The time series is divided into eight sections with 50% overlap, the Fourier transform taken of each of the sections and then averaging them. This gives reasonable noise averaging.
Also, the 44.1 kHz sampling gives you a frequency range up to 22.05 kHz (Nyquist rate) but I don’t know if your microphone can do that. The drop off at 20 kHz is suggestive of the mic cutting off but even that seems high.
But that regular pulse train … in frequency! Across the whole band practically.
Weird.

Here’s the second time series.

And it’s power spectrum.
This is a bit more typical, but you’ve still got that pulse train in frequency between 5 and 10 kHz. And they seem to align with the train from the first time series.
But you’ve also got some interesting peaks between 10 and 20 kHz. And funny how they seem to double pair at the end between 15 and 20 kHz.
You’ve got the same drop off at 20 kHz, which is a nice consistency with the first time series.

This is a bit more involved than I think I’d be able to give useful results.
I checked the peaks in the power spectrum between 5 and 11 Hz of the two and the ones that match match exactly. That’s very surprising from two different recordings.
Now this could be genuine sound that the mics are picking up but I wouldn’t expect those peaks to be absolute delta functions like that. That’s off. Too perfect. Or it’s EM driving the mics signals directly. That could be a possibility.
Honestly, if I had to pick odds, in my experience it’s something subtle but not obvious. Just just a lot of years of practical experience speaking. It could be in the power spectral calculation.
You would have to set it up more as a science experiment. Three or four identical mics, maybe in a square formation. Facing the same direction, or all out or all in. Something symmetric. Hitting a sharp triple tap on something hard for them to pick up and establish an absolute time base.
But those peaks in the spectrum are genuinely odd. If there’s something there it’s really there.
Maybe contact an college nearby or someone you know personally that could look at this professionally. It’s an interesting problem.

UPDATE: Here, a Twitter poster video’d the application of the “voice in the head” tech to them, and you can hear the background hum, as well as tapping on the microphone which sounds just like this. There is a backup of the video here.

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