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jacquelyn sauriol's avatar

Wow, A few weeks ago I bought an old style mouse when I saw the signal coming from my wireless mouse. No bueno. The old mouse requires a dongle adapter, but works fine. I do cad drafting, so I can spend extreme hours at the keyboard. However, I am giving up the fight against PGE re my smartmeter installed 2019. Heart palps and tinnitus, worst ever both categories. Even passed out a few times. Many certified letters send, to no avail. My next charge would have been to protest on ADA grounds, since I cannot healthily be in my office in my house now. But instead, looking at a yurt on a small plot. Flexible as to state, such a site with water will be a challenge to find on my budget. If you have any leads, email me at my name all one word, at protonmail.com. best

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Ken Gartner's avatar

Well, JS, that is sad on many levels, that the basics of living in your own space has become such a pressing health concern such that you are willing to live *anywhere* just to regain your health, abandoning local friends or family. (Although, living in a Yurt does sound nice, if the humidity can be controlled).

It can be a difficult task to correlate symptoms with sources, but when we round up the usual suspects, a broadcasting meter is high on the list, as are devices like ring doorbells and nest thermostats and cordless phones and modern cars and rented WI-FI cable modems and the list goes on.

We BBs recommend Reduce, Relocate, Replace, Re-prioritize and Remove devices and sources as you might have control over them. So many of our own devices are silent troublemakers for our health. However, when it comes to items beyond much of your control, we are often left just with increasing distance, adding some kind of personal protection or interposing some kind of shielding, and the latter option gets even more limited for people who are not the owners of their space.

I will try to reach out to you via email, as you have described the address. One other option would be to find an elderly couple, who could use a live-in person to help as needed, and might be able to offer a low tech/EMF household or at least a backyard for the yurt.

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jacquelyn sauriol's avatar

Looking at this, https://www.groovyyurts.com/yurts/3-wall-yurt. Their yurt walls are cotton with a low vinyl percentage to make them more weatherproof. However, the walls for other yurts are polyester with polyester-vinyl roofs, which I balked at. I had googled 'my yurt made me sick and found the groovyurt folks. Rated for Mongolian winters. Regarding RF I did increase my distances by about 4 feet from bad sources, which is much helping. More barefoot, more outside, much better. I took the circuit breaker challenge (thats mine but you can use it) and turn it off every night now. Otherwise I wake up with low blood O2 and have a palpy day the next day. Geez. At least its clear they are trying to 'keeaal' us now. thank you and will email back.

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Ken Gartner's avatar

JS, this is a good testing regimen -- to turn off breakers at night and notice any direct correlation with your health symptoms. Not everyone sees a direct cause-effect so clearly as you report. In your case, you learned: (a) EMFs during your repose have a real effect, (b) particular circuits may be worse than others and might eventually be pin-pointed to a short list of offenders, (c) that your biology is particularly influenced by this energy signature, whatever it might be. Yet, another person in your household, exposed to the same EMFs might have no direct symptoms at all, which is what makes it all a complicated mess.

The situation you describe can often be associated with 'dirty electricity' frequencies on the 'hot wire' within the wall wiring around, under and below the bed. Turning off breakers de-energizes the 'hot wire', thus eliminates the DE exposure. People who cannot deal with the electricity turned off, may seek the hit-or-miss solutions of DE filtration, either at the main panel or at various live outlets within the living space. This would also help reduce one's exposure during the day to those same injurious aspects of the home wiring.

Note that some wiring anomalies will *not* be affected by turning off individual circuits -- such as when there is a Neutral-Neutral inter-tie and thus electrical current flows on the neutral wiring, which is not disconnected by the circuit breaker. Another case that won't be correctable by turning off the breakers would be a Neutral-Ground inter-tie, where there is current flowing on the equipment grounding conductor, again not disconnected by the circuit breaker. Such current flows produce magnetic fields, often carrying DE frequencies on it. In such cases, an electrician is needed to repair the root wiring errors, though it is admittedly hard to track these down unless one has the right mindset for the job.

A 'Mongolian-Winter' is sometimes how I liken our own indoor environment here, where we turn off the home electricity for so many hours per day that we often have only about 2 hours of home heating per day (it is all-electric heat) and are very pleased when sunny mornings warm the house above 50 F. As I type this, my desk is at 45 degrees F. I have written about this particular topic here.

https://kjgartner.substack.com/p/winter-reality?r=3gmjy9

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SONIA SHAPIRO's avatar

Thank you.

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