Psychological Manipulation and Induced Psychological Illness
Psychological harassment and psychological manipulation "mind control" can induce psychological and physical disorders. When an individual is targeted, the level of harassment usually begins slowly and increases with time.
Anytime someone interacts with you, they can influence your thoughts and also manipulate your thoughts.
Many victims of psychological harassment suffer from physical ailments, irritability, anxiety, nervousness, insomnia, stress, fatigue, depressive states, burn-outs, and in some cases suicide. Many are unable to continue working and suffer financial loss.
Psychological harassment has many forms: the most common being verbal abuse. Some tactics aim at trying to humiliate or weaken the morale of individuals or groups.
Mobbing also referred to by some as bullying, psychological terrorism, and organizational violence is described as a collective form of psychological violence in which many individuals unite to persecute an individual by making constant negative remarks, repeated criticism or sarcasm, intimidation, threats, insinuations, try to humiliate, circulate false information concerning the individual, and to socially isolate the individual. Mobbing is a way of destroying a person without using any physical means, a psychological war of nerves with wear the individual out tactics. A group attacks an individual's dignity, integrity, self-image, self-confidence, self-esteem, place in doubt of competence, threaten their careers, and means of subsistence.
One method used to induce distress or suffering in a person is by systematically isolating them from their peers.
After a few months some victims can suffer from psychiatric difficulties such as paranoia, chronic fatigue, loss of self-confidence, and depression.
Usually, people "tune out" the conversations around them. If you are in a crowded room and someone calls out your name they will probably attract your attention and the same goes for other specific words or sounds.
Individual's can recall or form images. The expression “I get the visual”. When someone talks about or describes a scene, you may form an image even if you have never seen what the other person is talking about or describing.
An individual can come in close proximity to another individual and ask a question, If the individual hears the question, whether he is the target of the question or not, his mind can respond with an answer. The answer response can be in different forms, such as an image or sound. For example, if the question is what does the person look like? The individual may form an image of the person in his mind. If the question is what is the person’s name? The individual’s mind may respond with the sound of the person’s name.
If someone says leave and slams a desk drawer or hits an object. This is a form of indirect intimidation, an indirect threat of violence. If these actions are repeated, it can become a form of conditioning. The next time a person slams a desk drawer or hits an object, the person may associate this as a threat.
Indirect Communication - State of Constant Interrogation
The group can begin by saying the individual's name, specific words, different sounds, and use other distracting actions to attract the individual's attention. The targeted individual realizes that the group is using some form of harassment and begins to listen to the group around him.
Using indirect communication, the group can insult the target, attack the individual's dignity and integrity, ask questions, threaten, and continue to use specific words and sounds to attract the targeted individual’s attention.
The indirect communication is also a form of conditioning and can lead to psychological disorders in which the victim feels that he is in a constant state of interrogation. For example, the individual may go to a different environment and hears sounds, words, and questions. Because of the indirect communication and conditioning, the individual may feel that he is still in a state of interrogation and believe that individuals are trying to interact with him. Normally, people would usually simply “tune out” the sounds and conversations of other people.
Inducing Degrading Images - Intrusive Thoughts
A group can try to make a targeted individual form degrading and perverse images by using combinations of words, descriptions, sounds, and actions. When degrading themes are used on individuals, the targeted individual can suffer from a psychological disorder that some psychologists have termed "intrusive thoughts".
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