Included themes
Surveillance, agents, classified status, recruitment, covert missions, coded media, gang-stalking narratives, technological control, thought monitoring, and AI-assigned tasks.
This site is a focused educational and resource project for people affected by psychosis involving surveillance, intelligence agencies, secret status, coded messages, covert technology, or missions.
Espionage-themed psychosis can be difficult to discuss. People may fear ridicule, loss of credibility, involuntary treatment, job consequences, or being treated as dangerous. Family members may feel trapped between arguing with the belief and accidentally reinforcing it.
The site is designed to provide a third option: calm language, clear safety boundaries, organized links, and practical routes to professional care.
It names a recurring content pattern, not a separate disorder in DSM or ICD classification systems.
Surveillance, agents, classified status, recruitment, covert missions, coded media, gang-stalking narratives, technological control, thought monitoring, and AI-assigned tasks.
Schizophrenia-spectrum disorders, delusional disorder, bipolar disorder, psychotic depression, brief psychosis, trauma-related states, substances, medications, neurological illness, delirium, and neurocognitive disorders.
Real stalking, coercive control, discrimination, fraud, workplace monitoring, and privacy violations can occur. The site recommends parallel mental-health and proportionate safety assessment.
The most useful next step is usually human: a trusted person, crisis counselor, early-psychosis program, clinician, medical service, domestic-violence advocate, attorney, or digital-safety specialist suited to the specific concern.
The public site does not require registration, profiles, comments, or personal-story submissions.
The provided build contains no ad networks, tracking pixels, or analytics scripts.
Bookmarks, theme preference, and the support plan use browser local storage and are not submitted to the site.
Semantic HTML, keyboard navigation, visible focus, reduced-motion support, responsive layouts, print styles, and light/dark themes are included.
The visual design avoids spy photographs, weapons, threatening silhouettes, and graphics that could intensify fear.
No framework, package manager, build pipeline, API, or database is required for the supplied deployment.
Content was organized through a broad source review and checked against public health agencies, national health services, formal guidelines, established mental-health organizations, specialist safety services, and recent peer-reviewed literature where the topic is emerging.
The resource directory prioritizes official and established organizations. External links and crisis-service details can change, so readers should confirm current information on the linked site.
Current review date: July 18, 2026
Espionage Psychosis is an educational resource, not a diagnosis, emergency service, law-enforcement service, or substitute for a licensed clinician. Actual stalking, abuse, and privacy violations can occur; serious concerns deserve calm professional assessment without automatically confirming or dismissing them.