Top Secret Psychiatry: It’s Overview, and need to go MAINSTREAM by Quintin J Ballentine

Hey, Let’s Talk About This Wild Idea Called “Top Secret Psychiatry”

You know, sometimes you come across information that just stops you in your tracks and makes you question everything you thought you knew about mental health. That’s exactly what happened when I read through these two documents. One lays out a pretty harsh critique of everyday psychiatry, and the other pulls back the curtain on some seriously secretive stuff that governments and powerful groups have been doing with the human mind for decades. Today I want to have an honest, heart-to-heart conversation about what they reveal. We’ll look at how regular psychiatry works, dive into this hidden “top secret” side, talk about why both approaches have caused so much pain, and then explore a hopeful new way forward. Imagine using all that advanced knowledge not to control or numb people, but to genuinely heal those who are suffering inside. I’ll keep this real and straightforward—no complicated jargon, just one person talking to another. By the end, I’ll add an important legal note because these are heavy topics.

Let’s start with the basics of how things work right now in regular psychiatry. The system seems built on the idea that the only thing that exists is what we can see and measure. No room for souls, spiritual experiences, or anything beyond the physical world. If you have a tough time emotionally or start seeing or hearing things others don’t, doctors often label it as a chemical problem in your brain. They get together in groups and literally vote on what counts as an official “illness.” Once they give you that label, the main solution is usually strong medications. These drugs were originally developed from chemicals used as pesticides. They target certain parts of the brain to calm things down, but the documents describe them as basically creating a chemical version of an old-fashioned lobotomy. Instead of feeling fully alive, many people end up emotionally flat, confused, and disconnected from joy. Over time, this approach can lead to serious health problems, including much shorter lifespans and even the inability to have children. It feels less like healing and more like quiet control—keeping people calm and compliant while ignoring any deeper spiritual side of what they’re experiencing.

The papers point out how this creates a chilling double standard. In everyday life, if someone starts communicating with a non-physical being or has powerful visions, they’re often diagnosed as sick and medicated heavily. But in certain closed circles with high-level clearance, the exact same experiences get treated as valuable gifts. One story that really stuck with me was about a man who began seeing an angelic guide after an accident. A regular doctor would have called it a serious disorder and tried to make it disappear with drugs. Instead, because of his background, specialists recognized it as a special ability and trained him in things like mentally traveling to distant places or viewing hidden information. It makes you wonder: Are we pathologizing natural human potential just to fit a narrow view of reality?

Now, the second document goes much darker. It describes a whole underground world where these same drugs, combined with intense experiences and high-tech methods, were used to deliberately break people’s minds and rebuild them. The goal wasn’t therapy—it was creating individuals who could be switched on and off like machines. Some were trained to have incredible focus, perfect recall, or even abilities most of us only dream about, like sensing what others are thinking or traveling beyond their bodies. But these skills were kept hidden from the person themselves until triggered by certain commands. The techniques involved hundreds of different substances that could make someone feel like they were in heaven or hell, create deep forgetfulness, or split their sense of self into completely separate parts. Places that were supposed to be for healing or research were reportedly used for these experiments, often on people who had no idea what was happening to them and no way to escape.

Reading this stuff honestly makes your stomach turn. You start to feel a deep sadness and anger for all the people who trusted the system only to have their spirits dimmed or their minds fractured. Think about families watching someone they love slowly lose their spark because of ongoing medication. Or individuals who sense there’s more to their experiences than a simple brain imbalance, but get told they’re defective and need to be “fixed.” The emotional weight is heavy—lives shortened, creativity crushed, spiritual openings slammed shut and called sickness. It feels like a betrayal of what medicine should be: a path toward wholeness, not a tool for quiet suppression.

The secret side carries its own terrible human cost. When knowledge about the mind, energy, and non-physical realities gets twisted for power, it leads to unimaginable harm. People become pawns—used for hidden operations, stripped of free will, and left with shattered identities. The documents suggest this hidden system works hand-in-hand with the public one: regular psychiatry keeps the general population numb and doubting their own inner experiences, while the advanced methods are reserved for a small group who use them to maintain control. It creates a world where those who question things or show signs of deeper awareness are quietly removed from society, while those willing to serve darker purposes get enhanced abilities. The emotional impact hits hard when you realize how many might be walking around carrying unseen damage from these practices. It leaves you grieving for lost potential and furious at the waste of human spirit.

But what if we could take everything we’ve learned from both worlds and turn it toward something beautiful instead? That’s the exciting proposal I want to focus on. What if we created an open, compassionate version of this advanced understanding—one that treats every person as a whole being with body, mind, emotions, and spirit?

Instead of reaching for strong medications as a lifelong solution, we could use carefully chosen, short-term supports only when truly needed, always paired with ways to help the person process their experiences safely. If someone starts having visions or sensing invisible presences, we wouldn’t automatically assume something is broken. We’d explore it gently, asking whether this might be an opening to greater awareness rather than a flaw to be erased. The same techniques once used to split minds apart could be reversed to help bring fragmented parts back together in a loving, guided way. Methods that were developed to send people into other states of consciousness could become tools for deep inner healing—allowing someone to safely visit painful memories, release old trauma, and return feeling lighter and more integrated.

We could teach everyday people skills that used to be kept secret: ways to calm and focus the mind, methods to explore inner landscapes for answers, or practices that strengthen natural intuition and resilience. Imagine centers where someone struggling with overwhelming emotions learns not just to manage symptoms, but to understand the deeper message their experience might carry. Kids who are labeled as too defiant or emotional could be guided to channel that fire into positive leadership instead of being dulled by drugs. People carrying heavy grief wouldn’t be rushed into chemical numbness; they’d be supported through a natural process that honors the soul’s journey.

The emotional possibilities here are incredible. Picture someone who’s felt broken for years suddenly realizing they have inner strength and abilities they never knew about. Families reunited as loved ones come back to full presence instead of living in a medicated fog. A society where mental struggle becomes a doorway to growth rather than a mark of shame. We already know from various accounts that many people recover best when spiritual dimensions are included in their care. Combining that wisdom with precise, ethical use of technology and natural supports could create breakthroughs we’ve barely imagined.

Of course, this would need to be done with the highest care. Everything would have to be completely voluntary, with full transparency and strong protections against any kind of abuse. Independent teams of caring professionals—not tied to old power structures—would guide the work. The focus would always be on empowerment, never control. But the foundation already exists in the knowledge these documents describe. The only missing piece is our collective choice to use it for good.

When you step back and consider the human stories behind all this, it becomes deeply moving. So many have suffered quietly, believing they were somehow flawed or incurable. So many bright spirits have been dimmed under the weight of a system that doesn’t see the full picture of who we are. But there’s real hope here. By bringing these hidden understandings into the light and dedicating them to healing, we could help millions find peace, purpose, and their own inner power. We could move from a world that fears and suppresses the deeper parts of ourselves to one that celebrates and nurtures them.

That’s the vision that stays with me after reading these papers. It’s not about pretending the problems don’t exist or ignoring real suffering. It’s about refusing to accept that our current approaches are the best we can do. We have the tools. We have examples of people who’ve found their way through spiritual support when nothing else worked. Now it’s time to build a new path—one rooted in compassion, respect for the whole human being, and the courageous decision to use advanced knowledge to lift people up instead of holding them down.

What do you think? Does this possibility excite you as much as it does me? The conversation has to start somewhere, and maybe this is it.

Medical Hold Harmless Statement
This essay is simply one person’s thoughts and opinions based on reading the provided materials. It is not medical advice, psychological treatment, or professional guidance of any kind. Nothing here should be used as a substitute for consulting licensed healthcare providers if you or someone you know is experiencing mental health challenges. Any decisions you make after reading this are entirely your own responsibility. The author cannot be held liable for any outcomes, positive or negative, that might result from this discussion. This is offered purely for informational and reflective purposes. Please prioritize your safety and work with qualified professionals for any personal health needs.

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