====== RF Emissions During Sleep ====== To test a long-standing observation that the synthetic voice and associated physical effects intensify precisely at the moment I lose consciousness, I configured my BR-9C handheld RF/EMF detector to emit audible clicks whenever it registered pulsed radiofrequency above its threshold. With my phone in airplane mode and all nearby Wi-Fi disabled, I placed the meter on my nightstand and let my laptop capture the audio feed while I slept. The result was unmistakable: for the first few minutes the detector produced only occasional, scattered clicks, but as my breathing slowed and deepened into sleep — clearly audible in the recording — the click rate accelerated dramatically, merging into a continuous, high-pitched buzz that saturated the meter’s alarm circuit. {{ :br9c_clicks_during_sleep.mp4 |}} This video preserves the entire sequence. Listeners can track my transition into sleep by the gradual shift from wakeful, irregular breathing to the slow, rhythmic pattern of stage-2 and deeper sleep, at which point the clicking escalates within seconds into an almost solid tone. The buzzing persists throughout the night, yet the instant I stir and my breathing pattern changes upon waking, the alarm falls abruptly silent, reverting to sparse, random clicks. This tight synchronisation between my state of consciousness and the detected RF bursts strongly suggests active monitoring and deliberate power increase during vulnerable sleep stages. {{ :screenshot_2025-12-05_at_23.23.04.png |}} For reference, the device used is a standard consumer-grade BR-9C two-band radiation detector, set to its click mode. {{ :screenshot_2025-12-05_at_23.20.26.png |}} The experiment could not be replicated because the BR-9C was targeted with electronic warfare itself a few days later, and stopped functioning correctly.