More Bizarre Psychological Situations People Endured

  • Have you ever dealt with anything like this or felt something similarity errie?

There are so many more more bizarre psychological situations people have endured! Have you read Bizarre Psychological Situations People Endured: Part One?

Dr. Lena Voss, a respected psychiatrist in Zurich had, had a patient that had her questioning herself. She began questioning whether her own childhood memories belonged to her or to her patient.


Adrian Keller is a reclusive graphic designer in Berlin. He documents the gradual shrinking of his apartment walls, using meticulous spreadsheets to track all the numbers.

Miriam Hale is a high school English teacher in Brighton and she has some strange things she hears. It’s her own thoughts that echo back to her, but with subtle corrections.

Professor Isabel Duarte, a linguist in Lisbon who loses the ability to say the word “mother.” The thing is,  she dreams of whispering it nightly.

Caleb Mercer, a Toronto architect, grieves his sister. But this sister has no birth certificate confirmation. 

Sophie Lindström is a psychology graduate student in Stockholm. She installs cameras to monitor herself, only to find hours of footage of her staring silently into the lens. (Now this would freak out almost anyone. Dissociation much?)

Thomas Iqbal is a mild-mannered accountant in Manchester. After a concussion, he wakes up with a dominant, charismatic personality that his family prefers. This is one of the most wild of the more bizarre psychological situations.

Dr. Rowan Patel is a therapist in San Diego. He insists every session with one patient is their first, despite years of records proving their prior appointments.

Elena Petrova is a ballet instructor in Prague who notices her reflection. She says that it occasionally hesitates before copying her movements.

Harold Bennett, a retired juror in Chicago, is tormented by guilt over a trial that does not appear in any legal archive.

Nadia Rahman  is a software developer in Dubai. She takes an online personality test that tells her she is “not the original.”

Lucas Moreau, a barista in Lyon, meets a stranger claiming they have shared identical dreams for months. This is one of the most wild of the more bizarre psychological situations.

Dr. Amara Okoye is a neuroscientist in Lagos. He loses the neurological capacity to experience fear  and soon after that, any attachment whatsoever.

Daniel Cho is a novelist in Vancouver. He becomes aware of a voice narrating his actions in precise third-person prose.

Greta Holm is a primary school teacher in Oslo. She wakes each morning with slightly altered handwriting and preferences.

Jonah Feldman, a librarian in Brooklyn, recieves letters praising him for a crime he cannot remember committing.

Dr. Farah Haddad is a  linguistics professor in Beirut who understands every word spoken to her. The thing is, she cannot produce any speech herself.

Irene Kovács is a museum archivist in Budapest experiencing life three seconds after it happens. This is one of the most wild of the more bizarre psychological situations.

Marcus Leung, is a biotech entrepreneur in Singapore who tests a memory-implant devices. He grows nostalgic for a fabricated childhood, that he created himself.

Theresa Caldwell is a clinical psychologist in Boston who slowly recognizes her patient’s dissociative personalities as mirrors of her own past decisions.

Omar Reyes, a paramedic in Phoenix, seems to become convinced he behaves differently when no one is watching.

Clara Whitmore owns a home in Savannah. She suspects her house expands in response to her lies. (Okay Pinoochio, we think you know what to do, right?)

Park Ji-hoon is a Seoul subway operator. He swears he remembers stopping at a station, but transit authorities deny it exists.

Keiko Watanabe  is a botanist in Sapporo who begins attributing human emotions to plants. He believes the plants respond.

Did you expect more bizarre psychological situations like these? Tell me all about it in the comments!