@nonoise
Well, I say it’s all in your head. There’s no reason to believe anything else. It’s the best possible explanation. I’m sorry, but I’m not very interested in listening to someone else’s psychological phenomenon. The facts, as far as I can find them, only support that it’s pure imagination. I’m sorry if that insults you. I keep asking for an alternative explanation and all I get is, in essence, "I can hear beyond the most sophisticated means of measuring!" Hogwash. I’m careful to avoid delusional thinking, and if you want to call avoiding delusional thinking a fault or weakness, so be it. That’s what this looks like to me. I don’t think it’s good or healthy. It’s not being "open minded".
What's more, I've had to learn a bit about practicing law in the last 9 months because I've been representing myself in a civil legal matter. It's just a basic tenant of law and general dialogue that the initiator of a motion or statement bares the responsibility of making their case. And it's generally accepted that when a claimant fails to substantiate their claims with some kind of evidence, they've lost.
Well, I say it’s all in your head. There’s no reason to believe anything else. It’s the best possible explanation. I’m sorry, but I’m not very interested in listening to someone else’s psychological phenomenon. The facts, as far as I can find them, only support that it’s pure imagination. I’m sorry if that insults you. I keep asking for an alternative explanation and all I get is, in essence, "I can hear beyond the most sophisticated means of measuring!" Hogwash. I’m careful to avoid delusional thinking, and if you want to call avoiding delusional thinking a fault or weakness, so be it. That’s what this looks like to me. I don’t think it’s good or healthy. It’s not being "open minded".
What's more, I've had to learn a bit about practicing law in the last 9 months because I've been representing myself in a civil legal matter. It's just a basic tenant of law and general dialogue that the initiator of a motion or statement bares the responsibility of making their case. And it's generally accepted that when a claimant fails to substantiate their claims with some kind of evidence, they've lost.

