DrHaroldMandel.org/DrMandelNews.com Holistic Healthcare/Speculative Fiction
Tuesday May 19, 2026
Independent Holistic Healthcare and
Human Rights Advocacy for Whole‑Person Wellness
DrHaroldMandel.org/DrMandelNews.com Holistic Healthcare/Speculative Fiction
Independent Holistic Healthcare and
Human Rights Advocacy for Whole‑Person Wellness
Your Donation Empowers Wellness
Your Contribution Defends Human Rights


I am a New York-based physician, medical journalist, and fiction writer. My work is defined by a lifelong commitment to medical advocacy—defending the individual against coercive systems of psychiatry and the corporate influences that sustain them. Currently, I focus my professional efforts on three critical pillars:

Transform your life at Rythmia, Costa Rica! Enjoy Ayahuasca ceremonies, organic farm-to-table food, volcanic mud baths, and luxury wellness at the world’s first medically-licensed plant medicine center. 🌿✨ Click this link to learn more about Rythmia and to schedule a free info session>>> Rythmia: World's First Medically Licensed Ayahuasca Retreat

Red grapes are more than a refreshing snack—they’re a compact source of natural compounds that strengthen physical health and support mental clarity. Their deep color signals a rich concentration of antioxidants that work throughout the body to reduce stress, nourish cells, and promote balance.
Red grapes deliver hydration, antioxidants, and gentle energy in one clean, natural package. They support the body’s core systems while nurturing mental clarity—an easy, everyday way to strengthen wellness from the inside out.





The physics department at Lockard Engineering College didn’t usually throw parties, but by the fall of 2036, Bernie Finch had given them a reason to pour the cheap champagne. At twenty-three, Bernie had accomplished something extraordinary: he had used quantum mechanics to explore the boundaries of the soul. His senior thesis, a meticulou
The physics department at Lockard Engineering College didn’t usually throw parties, but by the fall of 2036, Bernie Finch had given them a reason to pour the cheap champagne. At twenty-three, Bernie had accomplished something extraordinary: he had used quantum mechanics to explore the boundaries of the soul. His senior thesis, a meticulous mathematical model demonstrating the conservation of consciousness and its subsequent transition into alternate organic lattices—the scientific validation of reincarnation—had just been cleared for publication in Nature.
He felt a deep sense of self-assurance as he walked home that evening. The years of sleepless nights and rigorous calculations had finally been validated.
Susana was sitting at the kitchen island of their off-campus apartment, buried in a diagnostic manual. She was a psychiatric nurse at the county hospital, her days spent managing the fragile minds of patients in crisis. Bernie, eager to share his excitement about the broader implications of his work, poured himself a drink and sat down across from her.
"I just don't know how you find fulfillment in a field that relies so heavily on guesswork, Suze," Bernie said, his voice earnest but entirely missing the mark. "Psychiatry just feels so imprecise to me. Real medicine maps the concrete mechanics of the body, or the universe. It feels like your field just alters chemistry to manage social discomfort because it can't truly measure a thought."
Susana froze. The exhaustion of a twelve-hour shift hardened into a cold, sharp fury. "Imprecise?" she whispered. "I hold people together while they are actively shattering, Bernie. You play with chalkboard equations."
"But equations represent absolute, objective truth," Bernie countered, firmly believing in his point but failing to see the emotional toll of his words. "From a purely scientific standpoint, subjective diagnosis leaves too much room for error."
The discussion quickly escalated into a painful argument that fractured three years of history in a matter of hours. Susana didn’t just feel disagreed with; she felt entirely dismissed by his rigid perspective. And Susana wasn't the type to let a slight go unanswered. She was the type to strike back where it hurt most.
Two weeks later, Bernie came home early from the university to surprise her. He walked into their bedroom and stopped dead. Susana was in their bed, and tangled in the sheets with her was Liam—Bernie’s childhood best friend and the lab partner who had helped him proofread his thesis.
Bernie’s universe collapsed. His blood ran hot, then entirely cold. He didn’t yell. He just stared, his hands shaking, a low, guttural breath escaping his throat.
Susana didn't scramble for the covers. She sat up, her eyes gleaming with a terrifying, calculated malice. She looked at Bernie’s pale, ruined face and smiled coldly.
"You're going to be very sorry you saw that private scene, Bernie," she said softly.
Bernie backed out of the room, packed a single bag, and checked into a cheap motel, his mind spinning into a dark, chaotic void. He thought the betrayal was the end of it. He didn't understand the terrifying leverage Susana held.
The next morning, two burly men in scrubs accompanied by campus security knocked on his motel door.
Susana had utilized her professional network perfectly. She had filed an emergency psychiatric intervention request, backed by a detailed, clinical report. According to her official statement, Bernie had suffered a massive psychotic break brought on by the stress of his thesis publication. She claimed he was experiencing severe, paranoid delusions of infidelity, exhibiting unprovoked rages, and making implicit threats against her life and Liam’s. Coming from a credentialed psychiatric nurse, the state didn't hesitate.
Because he resisted the men at his door—screaming the truth that sounded exactly like the paranoia Susana had described—the court ordered an involuntary, ninety-day psychiatric hold.
The next three months were a living death. Bernie was subjected to heavy, chemically steering anti-psychotics that turned his sharp mind into a sluggish swamp. When he tried to explain his physics thesis to prove his sanity, the doctors wrote it down as “grandiose delusions of cosmic grandiosity.” Every protestation of his innocence was logged as “lack of insight into his condition.” The system Susana weaponized was a trap with no exit; the harder he fought, the crazier he appeared.
By the time he was released onto outpatient supervision, Bernie was a shell. The drugs had dulled his intellect, but they hadn't dulled the agonizing realization that his life was permanently ruined. He couldn't return to Lockard. His reputation was shattered.
Sitting in his damp, empty studio apartment, Bernie looked at the copy of his thesis on the table. The math was still there. The data didn't lie. Consciousness was energy, and energy could be redirected. If this world, with its cruel systems and vindictive machinations, had no place for him, he would find a different lattice.
He closed his eyes and began to meditate, using the exact quantum-resonance frequencies he had mapped out on paper. He sublimated his mind, consciously detaching his awareness from the damaged neural pathways of his human brain and aligning it with a metaphysical tether he had discovered in the deep, blue mathematics of the ocean. He left a final note on his laptop—a single, strange request to the universe: Let me come back as a porpoise in the open seas.
Then, he swallowed the remainder of his court-ordered medication.
The Atlantic Ocean off the coast of Miami was an explosion of sapphire and gold under the morning sun.
A mile out from the crowded beaches, a pod of sleek, gray bodies broke the surface of the water in a synchronized, joyful arc. At the front of the pod was a young, powerful porpoise.
He didn't remember the name "Bernie Finch," nor did he remember the sterile smell of hospital corridors, the betrayal of a friend, or the suffocating weight of human malice. Those were flat, two-dimensional ghosts of a lesser existence.
Instead, he felt the cool, rushing embrace of the Gulf Stream against his smooth skin. He felt the intricate, beautiful web of echolocation clicking through his mind, mapping the vast, open freedom of the sea in perfect, mathematical clarity. He leaped high into the warm air, spinning effortlessly beside his new family, entirely free, and finally home.
Speculative Fiction
by Dr Harold Mandel

.





The psychiatric system does not stumble into failure. It delivers exactly what it wants. Its interventions take targeted activists, poor people, and even children, and leave them virtually ruined for life.
The drugs are the first weapon, and they often carve permanent neurological damage into the brain. But even in the absence of that dama
The psychiatric system does not stumble into failure. It delivers exactly what it wants. Its interventions take targeted activists, poor people, and even children, and leave them virtually ruined for life.
The drugs are the first weapon, and they often carve permanent neurological damage into the brain. But even in the absence of that damage, the real destruction is legal and social. The diagnosis is a brand. It is intentional stigmatization, and it destroys careers overnight, dissolves families, ends relationships, and guts estates through forced treatment, guardianships, and lost credibility in court.
Once labeled, the person is pushed into a solitary life of emotional torment. You cannot keep a job when your medical record says you are unreliable. You cannot keep friends when every disagreement is reframed as a symptom. You cannot keep a partner when the state has given a psychiatrist the power to define your reality. So people withdraw, not because they are ill, but because they have been made untouchable.
That isolation is then used as evidence. Psychiatrists point to the disintegration of personal relations that they engineered, and they call it proof of severe mental illness. It is a closed trap. The system creates the wreckage, names the wreckage a disease, and then offers itself as the only cure for the wreckage it caused. The goal is to push the victim back into the hold of the very psychiatric system that destroyed them in the first place.
Healthy relationships require energy. They require money, support in society, freedom of movement, and a lifestyle that is not pure survival. Psychiatry strips all of that away. It funnels its victims into extreme drudgery, into menial jobs far below their capabilities if they are allowed to work at all, into disability checks, into housing programs, into a daily grind of appointments and compliance. It leaves intelligent, capable people living sad, isolated, wasted lives, watching their talents rot while they fill out forms to prove they are still sick enough to deserve help.
This is not an accident. This is not poor training or a few bad apples. This is what the psychiatrists have in mind. A broken activist cannot organize. A broken poor person cannot fight back. A broken child grows into a compliant adult. The system is pathetic because it pretends to heal while it destroys. It succeeds because destruction was the real mission all along.

.








We use cookies to analyze website traffic and optimize your website experience. By accepting our use of cookies, your data will be aggregated with all other user data.