Re: want to escape wi-fi - and new here

Posted by Bob Connolly on
URL: https://www.es-forum.com/want-to-escape-wi-fi-and-new-here-tp1551077p1551090.html

Oh yes it works very well in stopping some of the radiation. My meter readings went way down.

But.... it's just a stop gap measure as you know. Apartment buildings are not the best place for someone that has EHS or is developing it. I feel it's best to just spend the time looking for a safer place to spend the rest of your life now that you have become sensitive. It will take you about 2 weeks to order the material - stick it up - and then explain to the people that you sleep with that you are not crazy.

It takes a month to find a place to live that will do the same thing only better - better sooner than later.

Now - if you owned a town house and lived between to people = spending the money to do it properly and re-drywall with the proper shielding screening material is a different subject all together.  


On 2009-11-25, at 6:17 PM, Ian Kemp wrote:

> Hi Alexa,
>
> We had good success with stopping cell tower emissions and signals from next
> door by simply putting up metallised woven shielding fabric on the wall and
> ceiling where it was coming in. An electrosmog detector shows a huge drop
> in signal. Didn't need to provide a full surrounding "Faraday cage". I
> think the same method seems to work against wi-fi so the simplest quick fix
> may be to fix some shielding fabric on your ceiling to block most of the
> emissions from the apartment above. Can others confirm whether this should
> work against wi-fi?
>
> Incidentally, I assume you have already got rid of your cordless phone and
> the base station - most base stations emit a constant signal in the MW range
> which is certainly damaging. Not as bad as a receiver up against your ear,
> but it's a constant exposure that wears you down, whereas the earpiece just
> affects you when you're making a call.
>
> Ian
>
> _____
>
> From: [hidden email] [mailto:[hidden email]] On Behalf Of
> [hidden email]
> Sent: 25 November 2009 21:47
> To: [hidden email]
> Subject: [eSens] Re: want to escape wi-fi - and new here
>
> Robert, sorry you had to sell your house....geeesh. It just seems insane to
> me that our society is allowing all this. I am concerned that I am
> developing ES - I don't know at this point how much of my chronic fatigue
> type problems are due to it. I can physically feel when the wi-fi is on
> though. And after talking on a cordless phone I'll feel this "heaviness" in
> and around my head which I used to attribute to other things - also a
> lingering brain fog cloudiness that can last for hours. Now I can have the
> same call on a corded phone and I don't feel that. Though my trusty gauss
> meter tells me even my corded phone has a field it's sending into my head
> too - looks like if I want to get rid of all this stuff it might be a long
> expensive, inconvenient road.
>
> A few years ago I moved into an apartment in the Silicon Valley area and
> within a few days my existing heart arrhythmia got so bad (worst ever in my
> life) that I had to go to the ER. I had to stay on heart medicine for quite
> a while after that. I also developed a benign tumor as well. In hindsightI
> can't help but wonder if I was surrounded by wifi even then - it was silicon
> valley and I had neighbors on all sides - this was 2004. After I moved
> things got better, until my neighbor moved in above me. It's been a year and
> a half of shallow sleep and fatigue until I just keyed in on this wi-fi
> angle. I had a very bad reaction to fluorescent lights in a super store
> which kicked off investigating all this stuff.
>
> Whew, that was long - thanks for reading!
>
> Alexa
>
> A part of me is still playing the inner skeptic and I joke about buying my
> "tinfoil hat" but
>
> --- In eSens@yahoogroups. <mailto:eSens%40yahoogroups.com> com, Bob Connolly
> <robert_connolly@...> wrote:
> >
> > Alexa - I too had the exact same experience as you. Slept in a cage,
> painted the walls etc. Hung up the drapes. AND I even own that cap - but it
> really is for outdoor use.
> >
> > But if you have become sensitive to the Dect phone and WIFI - it's better
> that you move to a place where you are away from neighbours on all sides.
> Next will be the cell towers coming in the windows. It's only going to get
> much worse.
> >
> > You can't easily cure yourself of the problem unless you remove yourself
> from it soon. It is a cumulative effect and it's hard to turn your
> sensitivity off - these are early warning signs and it's good you caught
> them. Most people just think they are getting old and sick and then they get
> terrible diseases and then.....
> >
> > Best to move into a bacement apartment of a house or Get out of the city -
> and perhaps share a house with someone that understands that they are
> gradually killing themselves if they use this stuff.
> >
> > At least you don't have to sell your house like most of us do that live
> beside cell towers...
> >
> >
> > On 2009-11-25, at 5:59 AM, roxalis@... wrote:
> >
> > > Hi everyone,
> > >
> > > I am new here - just got started learning about EMF a few weeks ago.
> I've discovered I am sensitive to wi-fi and particularly the 2.4Ghz
> frequency. I've turned off my own wi-fi emitter and 2.4 cordless phone and
> there's a noticeable improvement. I feel like it's quieter somehow and my
> sleep has been improved. BUT with my own laptop I can look and see that I
> have FIVE other wi-fi emitters in close range to me - I am in an apartment
> building. My tech loving neighbor upstairs from me has THREE and I have no
> idea why any one person need three different ones, but he has them. In my
> bedroom my laptop shows that he has an emitter directly over my head in the
> bedroom - full strength at 5 bars. He's not the kind of guy who would
> respond well to me approaching him about this, so I'd rather come up witha
> solution that's under my control. Any suggestions?
> > >
> > > I've ordered the baseball hat that has the naturashield fabric in it to
> see how much difference it makes. Has anyone else tried this cap? And do
> these EMF shielding fabrics really work?
> > >
> > > Thanks!
> > > Alexa
> > >
> > >
> >
> >
> >
> > [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
> >
>
> [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
>
>



[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]