Sunday, November 22, 2020

Seismopathy

 I have taken some action today for the first time where I'm trying to reach out where I'm not alone with this seemingly unusual condition I have. I know it is real. I have thoroughly examined it for years where I have found a connection with earthquakes. I am aware that there are people known as "earthquake sensitives". I have read accounts from said cases, but those peoples' stories did not sound anything like what I have. They seemed somewhat flimsy. It has not been easy at all finding resources that would take me on. I am even willing to have experiments conducted on me, as long as they are safe and ethical of course. I don't think I would be okay with someone injecting me with COVID-19 or other diseases to examine the affects it would have on this. Well, THIS will no longer be called this, that, or that thing that entails pain before earthquakes. I asked for some advice from a family member and I have the green light to put a name on this. Patients or sufferers on uncommon occasions have named conditions themselves. I don't have to wait around for a doctor to name it for me. I sorted out suffixes and their meanings to help come up with a name for this. I finally came up with the term Seismopathy. I googled it first to see if it already existed and it does not. Seismo is derived from the greek word seismos which translates to "earthquake". The suffix pathy is also derived from a greek word, patheia which relates to feeling or suffering. Naming this would give this structure and therefor help me effectively find a way for this to gain visibility. Seismopathy is not an infectious disease of course. It must be genetically predisposition, meaning it was already there before I became aware of it. It seemed like it was dormant up until I visited California for the first time when I first made physical contact with a tectonic plate boundary. I have always been sensitive to vibrations in the ground all of my life, but this really developed after I first made physical contact with a tectonic plate boundary. This goes beyond sensing an earthquake. I experience various aches and pains before and during earthquake activity - most notably flank pain. It sounds like it largely involves the nervous system, but it affects every system and function in my body. When it comes to the pain in my side, I have figured that when strain energy from a fault or surface hits a critical level where at least some of it is on the verge to be released, it reaches my body at an astounding speed where it strikes a nerve there. It is in the central part of my body where there is this pocket where the energy collects from traveling up and down the body from the ground. There is more space in my left side than my right side which is why I always feel the pain in my left side. I have also noticed that I can feel some acute pain in my side whenever the activity in the region suddenly comes to a halt after very small and frequent quakes have been occurring. Down inside, I seem to know what exactly is going on. Right now, I know there has not been anymore earthquakes here in Southern California over the last hour, although it feels just about ripe for more at any moment. However, I'm aware that there is some activity warming up immediately North of here. When it comes to large earthquakes elsewhere in the world, I experience more subtle sensations. My energy levels increase along with my heart rate and body temperature. I feel it more in my core when it comes to more significant quakes around the world. I feel like I have taken a big step in one day by taking more action in putting this out there and beginning to come out of anonymity.

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