For James it started when he was a boy.
In those days computer monitors were big bulky things that housed cathode ray tubes (CRT).
He noticed he was getting blurry vision and was seeing a spot in one part of
his eye.
Invariably this lead to a headache.
The general consensus was that he’d got CRT syndrome.
His parents took him to an eye specialist who informed him, “you’ve got a stye at the back of
your retina from a parasite.”
This was disproved years later when he went to the Eye Institute in Pretoria in South Africa and they put him through a whole batch of tests and found no such scarring or damage or anything like that.
When he was at school in Math class, whenever the teacher
would put on the fluorescent light – this would normally be in winter or when it was raining – he noticed would go into this hazy state.
Twenty minutes of the class would go by and, “the teacher would do all these things that I don’t remember much or I’m not responsive”.
She would ask
him a question and he was just in a zombie daydream state.
This was not like James at all.
He got very high grades in math. He enjoyed it. Loved it. Relished it even.
When he was in high school,
James’s mother bought him his first mobile phone, a Nokia 5110. He had it with him in case she had to contact him during school hours.
One time during science class, the phone rang and the science teacher was shouting at James and again, he was in a dazed state and his nose was bleeding. His friend was going, “Dude, what’s up? Your phone is ringing.”
He eventually snapped out of it and realized what was happening.
Like all his friends James got a Bluetooth headset, except within five minutes, “ I had head pain from it”.
He started to get more focused
on putting two and two together.
But when he explained to doctors and other medical professionals what he was experiencing he felt he was being brushed away.
In 2011 James’s health took a turn for the worst. He went to see another neurologist specialist.
He gave him all the literature and again he felt the neurologist was being dismissive with him.
He’d had an initial MRI and he then sent James for a second follow-up MRI scan.
He suffered a stroke – during the MRI
scan. As a result of the MRI.
At the beginning of this year James survived another stroke.
Showing wisdom beyond his years James says, “these things happen in life. I’m more functional now and I’m learning. It’s a process.”
He later learned from another neurologist (the one currently treating him) how the MRI is different and why he had the stroke.
He say’s, “CT scan I’m fine, x-ray I’m fine, but MRI had that knock-over effect for me”.
But it’s through these trial and tribulations that James has been able to refine his research into quantum biology and understanding things a lot better.
This is now to be the subject of James’s PhD. In South Africa, James was the first person to be officially diagnosed by the state with electromagnetic field intolerance syndrome (EMF-IS).
He say’s, “I’ve gone through the whole process. I’ve been to courts. I’ve got a whole a bunch of things behind me on that experience.”
His focus is to find EMF mitigation options for the country.
For my next interview, I'm delighted to welcome EMF expert James Lech:
Lloyd Burrell