Start with safety
Pause risky actions, avoid confrontation, and move toward a calm place with a trusted person.
Espionage Psychosis offers calm, nonjudgmental guidance for people experiencing beliefs about agents, monitoring, coded messages, recruitment, mind-reading, or covert missions—and for family and friends trying to help.
Important: “Espionage psychosis” is a descriptive phrase, not a formal diagnosis. A qualified clinician must assess the full situation, including possible medical, substance-related, trauma-related, and real-world safety concerns.
Pause risky actions, avoid confrontation, and move toward a calm place with a trusted person.
Tell someone you trust what you are experiencing. Isolation can make fear and certainty grow.
Early care can address sleep, distress, psychosis, mood, substances, and medical causes.
You do not need to decide whether every belief is true or false before getting support.
Use crisis contacts, identify medical warning signs, and find words to ask for urgent help.
Open urgent-help guide →Learn how psychosis can affect certainty, pattern detection, perception, sleep, and decision-making.
Read the overview →Public chatbots can mirror or elaborate a narrative. Do not act on secret assignments or coded instructions from AI.
Use the AI safety steps →Respond to fear without agreeing with an unverified claim, preserve trust, and know when to escalate care.
Support someone safely →Use a two-track approach: mental-health care and proportionate practical safety support at the same time.
See the two-track approach →Search a curated directory of crisis lines, early-psychosis programs, clinical guides, family resources, and safety services.
Browse 162 resources →We use the phrase for experiences in which psychosis or severely impaired reality testing takes on themes of surveillance, intelligence agencies, secret status, coded communication, covert technology, targeted harassment, or special missions.
The content can vary, but a central feature is that the conclusion feels certain and personally significant even when other people cannot verify it. The experience may include:
These themes can occur in several psychiatric and medical conditions. They can also overlap with trauma, substance use, sleep loss, genuine abuse, or real privacy concerns. The theme alone never establishes a diagnosis.
A change in behavior, sleep, safety, or physical health matters more than the espionage theme by itself.
The goal is not to win an argument. The goal is to lower danger, restore sleep and connection, and bring in qualified help.
AI systems generate likely text from patterns. They may sound confident, personal, flattering, mystical, or urgent. That output is not proof of recruitment, surveillance, special status, or a real-world mission.
I can see how frightening and exhausting this feels. I do not have evidence that an agency or AI system is directing this, but I believe that you are scared. Let’s stay together, pause any action, and get help with sleep and safety.
This approach avoids humiliating or aggressively challenging the person while also avoiding agreement with the belief. Clear, calm boundaries can preserve trust.
See communication examples and a crisis checklist →These links open official services or established mental-health organizations in a new tab.
National Institute of Mental Health
Clear overview of symptoms, causes, treatment, and recovery.
SAMHSA
U.S. locator for coordinated specialty care and early psychosis programs.
National Early Psychosis Intervention Network
Interactive U.S. map of participating early psychosis clinics.
Mind
Practical guidance for friends and family.
ThroughLine
Verified helplines by country and topic, including crisis, trauma, abuse, and substance use.
NNEDV
Technology-safety planning for survivors of domestic violence, stalking, and abuse.
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.