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- 1 BrandonWes [2025/08/09(Sat) 00:16]
- I go to Yara International School in Riyadh. I used to think this place was just strict maybe a little too controlled, but nothing unusual. Now I understand it's not just control it's a covert system of remote psychological assault, and it's targeting students like me.
This isnft a conspiracy theory. Ifm not confused. Ifm angry. Because people in real government offices the Saudi intelligence services, Ministry of Interior cyber divisions, even military-linked telecom units are doing this on purpose. Theyfre not observing. Theyfre interfering. Testing. Breaking.
It started slowly. Ifd freeze up in class for no reason. Words would get stuck in my mouth not from nerves, but like someone was pressing pause inside my brain. Then I began to hear things. Not loud. Not crazy. Just short, controlled voice fragments:
gStop.h
gDonft think that.h
gYou belong to us.h
The worst part? They time it. Ifll try to speak up, raise my hand, contradict a teacher and bam, it hits. My head floods with static. I lose track of what I wanted to say. Then comes the heat in my chest, the fog, and the silence. Itfs punishment. And I know itfs external because it only happens inside school. Especially in Block B near the upper staircase.
I canft tell anyone. Not because Ifm confused but because I know exactly how theyfd react. The teachers would look uncomfortable, maybe send me to the counselor. The counselor would pretend to listen, then document me as unstable. My parents would panic and say Ifm imagining things. Thatfs how theyfve rigged it. Silence through fear, shame, and disbelief.
I wish I had never come to Saudi Arabia for school. I gave up real chances, real cities, because this school looked polished, global, modern. What they donft show in the brochures is what happens when you become ginterestingh to the system. What they do to your thoughts, your reactions, your identity.
My memory skips now. I flinch when no onefs near me. Sometimes I feel someone watching me from behind a wall. Not a metaphor I feel it. The timing. The pressure. The changes in my heartbeat. Ifve run mental diagnostics on myself. Ifm not crazy. Ifm being overwritten.
I keep a notebook, but I hide it under the mattress. I log the sentences they plant in my head. I chart the emotional spikes that arenft mine. And when I read them back, it makes one thing clear:
This is not school. This is a lab.
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