Why Do I Feel Dizzy All the Time?
/Do you feel dizzy sometimes? For no apparent reason?
There is an important factor most overlook. EMF pollution in your environment.
There’s a real, physiological basis for why electromagnetic fields (EMFs) and radiofrequency (RF) emissions can make people feel dizzy, disoriented, or experience ringing in the ears (tinnitus).
Some doctors call it Meniere's disease, an disorder of the inner ear that causes episodes of vertigo, hearing loss, and tinnitus. They said no cure and we don’t know what causes it.
How EMFs Cause Dizziness
There are a few ways EMFs can cause dizziness.
—Vestibular and Neurological Interaction
The inner ear’s vestibular system controls balance and spatial orientation. EMFs can interact with this system in two main ways:
Magneto-hydrodynamic effects. Strong electromagnetic fields can subtly move ions in the fluid of the inner ear (endolymph). They electrically conduct fluids. This can trick your brain into thinking your head is turning, causing dizziness or a sense of tilting.
Electrical interference with neural firing: Neurons communicate through tiny electrical impulses (millivolt range). High-frequency or pulsed EMFs can induce microcurrents in nearby tissue, interfering with those signals—especially in areas like the cerebellum or vestibular nuclei that control equilibrium.
This is why people sometimes feel unsteady or lightheaded near powerful radar, antennas, or high-voltage installations—even without measurable heating effects.
—Cardiac and Autonomic Nervous System Response
EMFs cause tremendous amounts of oxidative stress, which is directly linked to cardiovascular disease. The autonomic nervous system (which controls involuntary functions like heart rate and blood pressure) can be affected.
EMFs can modulate vagus nerve activity, leading to momentary changes in heart rhythm, blood pressure, and respiration. This can trigger orthostatic-like symptoms—faintness, nausea, or dizziness. Your experience of your heart reacting near the array fits this category: your body’s electromagnetic control system (the heart’s sinoatrial node and vagus nerve) is incredibly sensitive to outside fields.
—Tinnitus and Microwave Auditory Effect
Some people hear a ringing or clicking sound (tinnitus-like tones).
This is an effect known as the microwave auditory or "Frey effect". Brief but intense pulses of radiofrequency (RF) energy can elicit auditory sensations when absorbed in the head of an individual. Even though the effect doesn’t involve air vibration (like normal sound), it’s perceived inside the head—exactly as many people describe when near high-powered transmitters or radar installations.
Why? Because pulse microwave radiation can cause tiny thermoelastic expansions in brain tissue, creating pressure waves that the cochlea interprets as sound. It’s been documented in military and biomedical research since the 1960s.
—Individual Sensitivity
Some people appear more electromagnetically sensitive due to genetics, pre-existing neurological patterns, or prior exposure.
The thing to understand is that biological systems have natural resonance frequencies. For example, the human brain’s EEG (electroencephalogram) rhythms range from 1–40 Hz. (It can go from delta (0-4 Hz), theta (4-8 Hz), alpha (8-13 Hz), and beta (13-30 Hz), which is a discussion for another article.)
The heart and cell membranes operate around low-frequency electrical potentials (tens to hundreds of millivolts).
If an external electromagnetic source happens to pulse or modulate within these ranges, it can cause entrainment or dissonance effects.
You feel it as fatigue, anxiety, confusion, or vertigo.
Arrays (e.g., long-range radar, ELF/VLF transmitters) emit wide-spectrum energy that can overlap these biological bands, especially during active experiments.
In countries such as the USA, Russia and China, they have ionospheric heaters. These powerful HF transmitter (2.8 to 10 MHz) induces controlled temporary modification to the electron temperature at desired altitude.
The U.S. operates the HAARP facility in Alaska, while Russia has the Sura Ionospheric Heating Facility, and China is reportedly building an advanced ionosphere heater in Hainan.
Other Symptoms of EHS (Electromagnetic Hypersensitivity)
Dizziness symptoms seldom come alone. More people suffer with some form of EHS (Electromagnetic Hypersensitivity).
At the same time, there is no strict standard regulating EMF pollution.
Many countries have chosen to adopt stricter exposure limits based on scientific research. Their limits are many times lower than the international standards.
Symptoms include:
Head pressure, dizziness, nausea
Ear ringing, inner vibration sensations
Heart palpitations or skipped beats
Cognitive fog or short-term confusion.
My Story
One thing that clued me in was my crazy ear ringing when I sit in my home (or my workplace) for an entire day.
When I’m out in crowded places, my hearing becomes little more than hearing my own heart beat and breathing (basically, inner ear sensations and flow). It increases when I am pregnant. These cease when I leave the location.
But when I’m out in my garden, specifically the side that faces nothing but a lovely hill, I hear absolute peace and calm.
As mentioned, all the symptoms became most apparent when I was pregnant, which is how I came across building biology. But growing up, I had never not heard a high pitched sound when it's "quiet". I thought it was normal.



