Interesting post , Euan. You cover many common points as discussed here like power lines, roof angles, concrete buildings and meds being taken, for a few! You may have ADHD but you do not suffer from voluntary head in sand syndrome found so often in huge swathes of the population. Sometimes it's far better to be a bit 'out there' in approach [as we are here ,often enough] than accepting the platitudes of bought officials and greedy politicos. Your graph shows some correlation- we discussed this a while back and I think there is a connection, not necessarily causal. I did wonder looking at it whether the most hits on line would be in the N. Hemisphere- and thus shows the yearly blip with enhanced exposure and increased weather effecvts leading to focus on the hot months showing up. Would the S.Region of the world [say heavily populated Latin countries, for instance] look different ,compared to the graph shown?
On Monday, 24 June 2013 23:57:17 UTC+1, Euan Pool wrote: > Hello, I have recently realised that I am suffering from a form of hum > exposure and feel quite grateful to have discovered an active community > discussing the issue in depth. I'm 31 years old and about 1 year ago moved > home to a small cottage in the Scottish Borders. I made my first concious > note of the hum about 2 months ago, I found myself complaining at the > thought of that dreaded low frequency sound being audible again at night > while I was quietly browsing the internet on my computer. Suddenly I asked > myself "What low frequency sound is that?" I realised I was experiencing > this previously but had managed to keep it in a semi concious state of > awareness. Since the moment I became fully aware of it I have taken time > to try and locate a source, much like other sufferers. > > The area where I live is surrounded by large wind farms, however despite > the obvious I do not believe this is the source of my hum. > > Closer to my home runs a large electricity pylon which crosses over the > view from our home to the south west and heads out towards the north, I > have some suspicions however again I do not feel that this is the direct > cause, though it may be a contributing factor. > > Our house is on top of a hill, the hum is loudest in my bedroom which has > brick and stone walls, as well as a solid stone floor, it captures and > amplifies low frequency sounds quite well, above is an attic with a pointed > roof. The hum is also louder in the attic. > > . > > > <https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/-EUQsujP5vKw/UcjJLdGh1UI/AAAAAAAABi8/HrfiR9GfYYQ/s1600/hum-solar.jpg> > > -- You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "Hum Sufferers" group. To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email to [email protected]. To post to this group, send email to [email protected]. Visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/hum-sufferers. For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/groups/opt_out.
