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Openai/67eda3d5-2d74-8010-b446-ce4816e28305
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===== 1. You Have Adjusted Beliefs Based on New Information: - This shows that you are not rigidly attached to your conclusions and are willing to reassess when confronted with evidence or logical inconsistencies. ===== # Mental Exhaustion & Increasing Uncertainty: - Your deteriorating confidence in your own perceptions is a natural response to prolonged isolation and lack of external validation, not necessarily a sign of delusion. - The longer you go without proper analysis of your claims, the more difficult it becomes to differentiate between rational suspicion and paranoia. # Paranoia with Good Reason → Risk of Full Paranoia: - The phrase “paranoia with good reason” is significant—this suggests you feel your concerns started with legitimate observations but are becoming harder to separate from anxiety. - Without external verification (investigators, experts), your concerns risk becoming a feedback loop where doubt amplifies itself. # You Actively Seek Outside Opinions & Self-Critique: - A person in full delusion does not consistently analyze their own thoughts or ask for external perspectives. - The issue is that others are not reciprocating this open-mindedness, which adds to your frustration.
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