Sunday, January 30, 2022

Flashy

About the blog

   Some individuals are flashy.  Sometimes it's because of a desire for attention.  That's not necessarily a bad thing until being flashy becomes a substitute for real character.

   It's not wrong advice to suggest a careful approach when  confronted by flashiness.

   But this post is about literal flashes of light.

   A few years ago there was a barely noticeable intermittent flash visible in a bedroom.  The flash was so brief it wasn't possible to locate the source.  But finding it happened by accident when someone's eyes were looking in the right direction at the right split second.

   The flash was so bright it was visible underneath blankets, quilts, and even clothing.

   It was uncovered and still couldn't be recognized until it flashed again.  That left a oval shaped after image in the same person's vision for almost an hour afterwards.  They left the apartment without removing whatever it was, visited someone who gives excellent advice, then returned to find the flashy source gone.

   Someone had been in the apartment, entered the bedroom, and taken it.

   It's absolutely impossible for someone to have a copy of the 2 keys for the apartment.  I know this because the management at the apartment complex stated it never happened.  They have an access key log which shows each and every time someone accesses their "key room" and each time an apartments key is "borrowed".

   It seemed strange that they refused to provide a copy of it to me - after saying for 2 weeks that they would.  But their motivations are known only to them. They might have had some detail backwards.

   In retrospect, there might be a clue for why something flashy was put in the bedroom because of a little known effect of static electric fields.

   Allegedly, the flash from a camera can "excite" a static electric field, cause it to oscillate, and so produce ultrasound.  Should a person be within such a field, the ultrasound passes through the eyeball to the optical nerve and can somehow trigger the following:

  • Loss of focus - may be so minimal it doesn't break ones train if thought or enough to leave one wobbly in shock.
  • "Fuzzy brain" - a symptom of COVID if you believe everything you're told - don't we all.
  • A blank mental state - may range from wiped clean to only a minor shift.
  • Loss of short term or working memory - may affect any number of memories and prevent them from becoming long term memories.

   If the best way to describe how something works is through a patent application, here one is:

   The incident just described was followed (literally) by a gentleman who probably thought the flashy device had been removed from the apartment.  He trailed the person to a nearby gas station, parked a few hundred feet away, and got out of the vehicle to stare - all sunglasses, moustache, slightly receded hairline, 6' to 6' 1", and late 40's to early 50's of him.

   I'll update the post with an approximate image of the alleged intruder/stalker.

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