EMF protection that actually works?
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I slept with my head on the other side of the bed today, to avoid the mold inside the drywall on the other side, but when I woke up today I felt absolutely horrible. I honestly think that this is because orienting my head moved it closer to the coaxial termination box mounted on the wall outside.... applying inverse square law of field strength, the difference here may well be significant.
Is there any way to protect myself from EMF that actually works? Using some kind of metallic-weave fabric runs the risk of creating a dish antenna and making the problem worse (http://web.archive.org/web/20100708230258/http://people.csail.mit.edu/rahimi/helmet/), especially in a highly urban environment... I've personally been wondering if some way of harnessing water would be effective, given that water rapidly absorbs signal (as well as nuclear radiation): https://space.stackexchange.com/questions/1336/what-thickness-depth-of-water-would-be-required-to-provide-radiation-shielding-i.
In that case, I would contemplate creating some kind of brain-protective water shield using ziploc bags or something, place in a nightcap, LOL.
And yes, I will be moving out of here as soon as possible.
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@aeblyve You could stick a copper mesh screen on to your wall, between you and the source of EMF, and ground it.
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@skylark Personally I'm really stuck on this idea of using water lining. An advantage could be brain protection from any number of EMF sources, higher portability, looking a bit less crazy. Has anybody done work on this?
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@aeblyve seems unreasonable