Neuropsychoviolence
The convergence of neuroviolence and psychoviolence: harm that simultaneously attacks the nervous system and the psyche, producing both physiological and psychological damage. This can involve sensory overload combined with emotional abuse, sleep deprivation paired with gaslighting, or algorithmic harassment that triggers both stress responses and existential dread. Neuropsychoviolence is particularly insidious because it leaves no visible scars while degrading both brain function and emotional resilience.
Example: “The relentless online campaign used patterned notifications, doxing, and public shaming—neuropsychoviolence, wearing down her body and mind at once.”
Neuropsychoalienation
A compounded state of estrangement from both one’s neurological processes and one’s emotional self, resulting from sustained neuropsychoviolence. The victim feels that their thoughts, feelings, and even physical sensations are not authentically their own—they seem scripted, imposed, or alien. This condition is often seen in survivors of severe online mobbing, coercive control, or torture. Recovery requires rebuilding trust in one’s own brain and heart simultaneously.
Example: “After the harassment campaign, she couldn’t tell if her anxiety was a genuine response or a conditioned reflex—neuropsychoalienation had made her own body feel like a stranger.”
Neuropsychoalienation
A compounded state of estrangement from both one’s neurological processes and one’s emotional self, resulting from sustained neuropsychoviolence. The victim feels that their thoughts, feelings, and even physical sensations are not authentically their own—they seem scripted, imposed, or alien. This condition is often seen in survivors of severe online mobbing, coercive control, or torture. Recovery requires rebuilding trust in one’s own brain and heart simultaneously.
Example: “After the harassment campaign, she couldn’t tell if her anxiety was a genuine response or a conditioned reflex—neuropsychoalienation had made her own body feel like a stranger.”
Neuropsychoviolence by Abzugal Nammugal Enkigal April 15, 2026
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