MIND GAME - THE DANGER OF BELIEVING YOU CAN READ MINDS
Everyone, at some point, has wished they could know what another person is thinking. Even social media platforms like Facebook have a prompt, "What's on your mind?" to encourage us to share our thoughts.
However, there's a huge difference between sharing and being spied on. Some individuals with unresolved childhood issues or psychological problems take this to an unhealthy extreme. They might spend their time trying to guess your thoughts, spying on you, making false accusations, and monitoring your every move. They might even act as if they are inside your head or are searching for some hidden truth.
This kind of behavior is abusive. A person engaging in this is often hiding while they secretly monitor a victim's personal life—what they watch, eat, shop for, read, talk about, or who they meet. They try to control every aspect of the victim's life.
Interestingly, these individuals genuinely believe they are looking for a hidden truth or solving a mystery. But this belief is a part of their illness. They might even go as far as to project their voice into a victim's home, acting as if they are speaking on the victim's behalf. This is a form of mental and emotional bullying.
This behavior must be stopped. Medical experts and law enforcement should intervene to protect a person's privacy and prevent this type of bullying from continuing. No one should have to endure this just because another person is sick or has their own hidden problems they are trying to project onto someone else's life.
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