David Humble
Sovereign Integrity Institute (SII)
Date: May 27, 2026
Status: Working Paper – Exploratory, Hypothesis‑Generating
License: Creative Commons Attribution‑NonCommercial 4.0 International (CC BY‑NC 4.0)
Abstract
Humans can enter self‑reinforcing expectancy loops in which socially reinforced beliefs about interpersonal influence produce real physiological and psychological effects through placebo/nocebo mechanisms, emotional contagion, attentional bias, reinforcement learning, and co‑regulation. This paper proposes a testable, falsifiable framework for understanding such dynamics without endorsing any supernatural ontology. Drawing on established research in psychophysiology, social psychology, and contemplative science, we examine how belief‑conditioned influence actors may experience genuine subjective changes (dopamine release, reduced anxiety, increased perceived energy) not because of literal energy transfer, but because their nervous systems reward expectancy. Highly self‑regulated participants (“coherent witnesses”) may be less susceptible to these dynamics due to reduced emotional reactivity, stronger boundaries, and limited contagion feedback. The paper includes illustrative case study frameworks for organized ritualized influence behaviors (including some esoteric and occult groups), framed as examples of socially reinforced expectancy systems rather than as evidence of supernatural extraction. The goal is not to validate or debunk any spiritual cosmology, but to provide a testable language for understanding a frightening and pervasive human dynamic.
Keywords: Expectancy effects, placebo, nocebo, emotional contagion, reinforcement learning, co‑regulation, belief‑conditioned influence, ritualized reinforcement, coherence
1. Introduction
Across cultures and centuries, humans have reported experiences that defy simple explanation: feeling drained after encountering a particular person; feeling energized after performing a ritual; believing that one has taken luck, power, or vitality from another. These experiences are often interpreted through spiritual or magical frameworks – curses, energy vampires, spiritual attack, or ritual extraction.
This paper does not attempt to prove or disprove any spiritual cosmology. Instead, we ask a different question: What measurable, physiological, and psychological mechanisms could produce these experiences, regardless of whether the underlying metaphysics are “real”?
We propose that belief itself is a biological variable. Belief changes brain chemistry, nervous system state, and behavior – via placebo, nocebo, expectancy, and reinforcement learning. An individual who believes they are influencing another may experience genuine physiological changes (dopamine release, reduced anxiety, increased subjective energy) not because of literal energy transfer, but because their brain rewarded them for the belief.
The paper is exploratory and hypothesis‑generating. It does not assert the existence of covert extraction networks as an ontological category. It examines reported experiences and proposed mechanisms, with the goal of providing a testable language for understanding a frightening and pervasive human dynamic.
2. The Phenomenon: Belief‑Conditioned Interpersonal Influence
2.1 What Influence Actors Report
Based on ethnographic accounts, clinical observations, and documented case studies, individuals who engage in belief‑conditioned influence practices frequently report:
| Reported experience | After attempting to influence a target |
|---|---|
| Increased subjective energy | Feeling “charged,” “alive,” or “powerful” |
| Reduced anxiety | Calm, sense of control |
| Enhanced luck or opportunity | Positive outcomes attributed to the practice |
| Sense of entitlement | Belief that influence is their right |
| Reduced guilt | Justification via spiritual or esoteric cosmology |
These reports are not evidence of supernatural energy transfer. They are evidence of physiological and psychological changes that could be explained by well‑established mechanisms.
2.2 What Highly Self‑Regulated Participants Report
Highly self‑regulated individuals (those with high regulatory stability, as measured by instruments such as the CP‑25) who perceive themselves as targets of such practices frequently report:
| Reported experience | After perceived targeting |
|---|---|
| Temporary depletion | Fatigue, brain fog, irritability |
| Boundary violations | Feeling invaded, watched, or pressured |
| Recovery after self‑regulation | Returning to baseline after rest, stillness, and boundary enforcement |
These reports are consistent with emotional contagion, co‑regulation, and the physiological cost of vigilance, not literal energy loss.
2.3 Organized Ritualized Influence Systems
Belief‑conditioned influence practices are sometimes organized into groups that provide cosmology, ritual, social reinforcement, and training. Examples include certain esoteric orders, neopagan covens, syncretic traditions, and online occult communities. Not all members of these groups engage in influence practices directed at non‑consenting others. Many practice benign or self‑focused rituals. Some groups explicitly forbid harming others.
However, some subgroups do teach, encourage, or normalize influence practices directed at outsiders – often framed as “energy work,” “vampirism,” “binding,” “cursing,” or “servitor creation.” These practices are documented in published ritual texts, online forums, ethnographic accounts (Luhrmann, 1989; Greenwood, 2000), and legal cases.
These groups are presented here as illustrative examples of socially reinforced expectancy systems, not as evidence of supernatural extraction.
3. Case Study Frameworks (Illustrative, Not Definitive)
The following anonymized case study frameworks are derived from ethnographic observation, document analysis, and the author’s longitudinal self‑observation archive. They are presented as heuristic examples of how expectancy‑driven influence dynamics can organize into social structures, not as definitive claims about any specific group.
Case Study 1: Initiatory Esoteric Order
| Feature | Description |
|---|---|
| Group type | Hierarchical initiatory order |
| Belief system | Members are taught they can influence “unawakened” individuals; framed as spiritual entitlement |
| Observed behaviors | Ritual practices targeting specific individuals; use of symbolic names and objects |
| Reported practitioner experiences | Increased energy, sense of protection, improved life outcomes |
| Reported target experiences | Fatigue, sense of being watched (self‑report) |
| Observed dynamics | Hierarchical control; obedience enforced through fear of magical retaliation |
Case Study 2: Online Occult Community
| Feature | Description |
|---|---|
| Group type | Decentralized online community of self‑identified practitioners |
| Belief system | “Energy can be manipulated”; influence framed as “vampirism” or “feeding” |
| Observed behaviors | Rituals performed remotely; use of photographs and names as links; group “sendings” |
| Reported practitioner experiences | Euphoria, reduced depression, increased confidence, community belonging |
| Reported target experiences | Emotional dysregulation, intrusive thoughts, fatigue (self‑report) |
| Observed dynamics | Echo chamber reinforcement; competition for status; influence framed as victimless |
Case Study 3: Syncretic Ritual Group
| Feature | Description |
|---|---|
| Group type | Small, face‑to‑face ritual group blending multiple traditions |
| Belief system | Influence framed as “balancing” or “karmic justice” |
| Observed behaviors | Group rituals involving chanting, drumming, visualization; use of candles and symbolic objects |
| Reported practitioner experiences | Euphoria, altered states, group unity, moral righteousness |
| Reported target experiences | Confusion, exhaustion, depersonalization (self‑report) |
| Observed dynamics | Charismatic leadership; groupthink; framing of influence as “healing” reduces guilt |
Limitation note: These case studies are illustrative frameworks, not empirical findings. They are based on the author’s observational archive and are presented to generate hypotheses, not to establish prevalence or causation.
4. Known Mechanisms (No Metaphysics Required)
4.1 Placebo and Nocebo Effects
Placebo effects are real, measurable physiological changes (endorphin release, dopamine activation, immune modulation) resulting from belief that a treatment will work (Benedetti, 2014). Nocebo effects are similar but negative: belief in harm produces harm.
Belief‑conditioned influence actors who believe they are gaining energy may trigger a placebo response – genuine physiological arousal and subjective vitality – without any actual energy transfer.
Targets who believe they are being influenced may trigger a nocebo response – genuine fatigue, anxiety, or depletion – even if no influence occurred.
The belief itself is sufficient.
4.2 Expectancy Effects
Expectancy effects (Rosenthal, 2002) demonstrate that what we expect influences what we perceive and how we behave. Influence actors who expect to feel energized are likely to notice (and amplify) any small change in their subjective state, reinforcing the belief.
Targets who expect to feel drained are likely to notice (and amplify) any fatigue, creating a self‑fulfilling prophecy.
4.3 Dopamine Reinforcement
The dopamine system reinforces behaviors that lead to reward (Schultz, 2015). If an influence actor performs a ritual and subsequently experiences a placebo‑driven mood boost, that experience reinforces the behavior – creating an addiction‑like loop.
| Step | Mechanism |
|---|---|
| 1 | Actor believes they are influencing |
| 2 | Brain may release dopamine in response to expectancy reward |
| 3 | Actor feels energized, powerful, lucky |
| 4 | Behavior is reinforced |
| 5 | Actor seeks repeat opportunities |
This does not require literal influence. It only requires the belief to be rewarding.
4.4 Emotional Contagion and Co‑regulation
Emotional contagion (Hatfield et al., 1994) is the tendency for humans to automatically mimic and synchronize with others’ emotional states. Co‑regulation (Porges, 2011) is the process by which nervous systems influence each other.
Highly self‑regulated individuals who reduce emotional reactivity (seal leaks) may be less susceptible to contagion, starving the expectancy feedback loop.
4.5 Perceived “Destiny Swapping” as Attributional Transfer
When an influence actor successfully co‑regulates a dysregulated target, the target may experience reduced anxiety, increased confidence, or temporary energy. The target may attribute these improvements to the actor’s intervention – “he took my bad luck and gave me good luck” or “she swapped our destinies.”
These outcomes are secondary effects of nervous system regulation, not magical destiny transfer. The actor did not take the target’s luck. The actor temporarily regulated the target’s nervous system, enabling the target to act more effectively. The actor’s belief that they “extracted” energy is a post‑hoc interpretation of a real, but mundane, physiological event.
5. The Coherence Response: Protective Factors
5.1 Reducing Emotional Reactivity
Highly self‑regulated individuals may be less susceptible to belief‑conditioned influence dynamics due to:
- Somatic regulation (breath, stillness, sensory reduction)
- Emotional containment (non‑reactivity, delayed response)
- Boundary enforcement (written communication, limited engagement)
- Documentation (pattern recognition, reality testing)
These practices reduce emotional contagion. The influence actor receives less feedback. Their expectancy loop weakens.
5.2 The CP‑25 as a Predictor
The CP‑25 (Coherence Protocol) measures regulatory stability across five domains (physiological, cognitive, behavioral, relational, environmental). Higher CP‑25 scores may predict:
- Reduced susceptibility to nocebo effects
- Faster recovery after perceived targeting
- Stronger resistance to emotional contagion
- Lower reinforcement value to influence actors
This is a testable hypothesis.
5.3 The WAAS Protocol as a Behavioral Intervention
Witness as a Service (WAAS) provides a structured, low‑reactivity response to perceived influence attempts – written communication only, no phone calls, no emotional escalation, structured escalation ladder. WAAS may reduce the influence actor’s expectancy reward (no emotional feedback), increase the actor’s perceived cost, and shift cost‑benefit perceptions away from influence behavior.
6. Why This Is Frightening (And Why It Matters)
Belief‑conditioned interpersonal influence dynamics are frightening not because of supernatural entities, but because they work – not metaphysically, but physiologically.
| Why it is frightening | Why it matters |
|---|---|
| Influence actors genuinely feel rewarded | Their behavior may be reinforced |
| Targets genuinely feel depleted | Nocebo effects are real |
| Belief systems authorize influence | People act on their beliefs |
| The loop may be self‑reinforcing | It can become compulsive |
| Highly self‑regulated individuals may still be targeted | No one is immune |
This is not a marginal phenomenon. It is a structural vulnerability in human neurobiology – one that can be exploited by any belief system that authorizes interpersonal influence, and amplified by organized groups that teach and reinforce such beliefs.
7. Research Agenda
| Question | Proposed Method |
|---|---|
| Do influence actors show dopamine activation during ritual? | fMRI or PET during imagined influence |
| Do targets show cortisol elevation after perceived targeting? | Salivary cortisol, heart rate variability |
| Does CP‑25 score predict resistance to nocebo effects? | Longitudinal cohort study |
| Does WAAS reduce actor reinforcement? | Controlled experiment with simulated influence attempts |
| Do belief systems that authorize influence correlate with dysregulation? | Cross‑cultural survey, network analysis |
| What protective factors reduce harm to targets? | Retrospective case‑control study |
| Does the “destiny swapping” attribution affect risk‑taking? | Behavioral economics experiment |
8. Limitations
| Limitation | Mitigation |
|---|---|
| Does not prove or disprove metaphysics | Explicitly stated; framework is agnostic |
| Placebo/nocebo effects are difficult to isolate | Double‑blind designs where possible |
| Self‑report bias | Corroborate with physiological measures |
| Small sample sizes in pilot studies | Replication across multiple labs/cultures |
| Ethical constraints on studying harm | Use simulated influence, retrospective analysis |
| Case studies are illustrative, not representative | Framed as heuristic examples for hypothesis generation |
| Potential to pathologize minority spiritual traditions | Explicit caveats; not all members engage in influence practices |
9. Conclusion
Belief‑conditioned interpersonal influence dynamics – the phenomenon in which individuals believe they can take energy, luck, or power from others – is frightening and widespread. It is often amplified by organized groups that provide cosmology, ritual, social reinforcement, and training.
But this phenomenon can be understood without recourse to supernatural mechanisms.
Placebo, nocebo, expectancy, dopamine reinforcement, emotional contagion, and nervous system co‑regulation provide a testable, falsifiable framework for explaining:
- Why influence actors feel energized
- Why targets feel depleted
- Why self‑regulation protects
- Why belief systems matter
- Why organized groups amplify the dynamics
- Why perceived “destiny swapping” feels real but is explainable as neurophysiology
This framework does not dismiss the terror of these experiences. It provides a language for studying them – one that does not require abandoning science or embracing unprovable metaphysics.
The highly self‑regulated individual who reduces emotional reactivity, documents patterns, and practices boundary enforcement may not be protected by magic. But they are protected by biology – and biology is something we can measure.
10. References
- Benedetti, F. (2014). Placebo effects: Understanding the mechanisms in health and disease. Oxford University Press.
- Greenwood, S. (2000). Magic, witchcraft and the otherworld. Berg.
- Hatfield, E., Cacioppo, J. T., & Rapson, R. L. (1994). Emotional contagion. Cambridge University Press.
- Luhrmann, T. M. (1989). Persuasions of the witch’s craft. Harvard University Press.
- Porges, S. W. (2011). The polyvagal theory. W. W. Norton.
- Rosenthal, R. (2002). Covert communication in classrooms, clinics, courtrooms, and cubicles. American Psychologist, 57(11), 839–849.
- Schultz, W. (2015). Neuronal reward and decision signals. Physiological Reviews, 95(3), 853–951.
Published by: Sovereign Integrity Institute (SII) – siistrategic.com
Author: David Humble
License: Creative Commons Attribution‑NonCommercial 4.0 International (CC BY‑NC 4.0)
