Hey gabz2133. I read your comment and I'd like to help you understand this better. RFID is incapable of doing what you're describing. I'll try to explain.

An RFID reader works by sending electronic energy at whatever object holds the RFID tag. When the tag 'receives' this energy, it provides power to the teeny tiny embedded microchip that holds the information. If you look closely at images of RFID tags online, you'll notice they look like spirals of metal strips. This length of metal is used as an 'antenna' of sorts for the energy I mentioned before. If you were to peel apart a public transit pass, you would see an RFID tag embedded in it, and the reader on the turnstile works exactly how I described before.

Here's the thing- RFID tags don't hold very much information. Almost all RFID tags sold today are pre-programmed at the factory, and can't be reprogrammed at all. Often times they only hold numbers, about 16 characters in length. Some security companies use tags for door access, and those tags will often have a mixture of letters and numbers programmed for that specific building or company. It is possible to reprogram RFID tags, but it's very rare indeed.

What doesn't happen is the chip being reprogrammed and beaming to someone a great distance away. If they were reading your thoughts, they would need a device that's writing that information to the teeny tiny tag, and they would need a reader that's very very close. After they receive your thoughts, they would need to erase what's on the tag and rewrite it, constantly. That's the work of a computer, not something the size of a grain of rice.

RFID is a very low-power technology and as such, you often can't get reliable readings at distances more than a foot or two, without having a reader that's so big you would easily notice someone pointing it at you. And even then, if they had a gigantic reader, it almost definitely wouldn't be able to read through walls.

There are lots of people who have chosen to have RFID tags implanted in them as science experiments or as part of their hobby in technology. They've uploaded videos of the process and I can safely say, it doesn't look pain-free at all. If someone put a tag inside you, you would absolutely notice an open wound in the area they implanted it.

There are also no RFID tags that contain a microphone, recording device, and transmitter. Technology just hasn't had the need to make that possible yet. If you were hearing the people who did this, that would require yet another device to be tied into this whole system, a speaker that would broadcast the sound. And if all of this is implanted inside your body, the sounds they would receive would be muffled noise, and you definitely couldn't hear them from a microscopic speaker inside your skin.

The only way for this to even be conceivable is using technology that doesn't exist. There has never been anything invented that allows one person to hear or read the thoughts of another person. We can measure activity of the brain, but all that tells us is you're thinking hard or excited or aroused, not specific thoughts. There has also never been an invention that forces thoughts into someone else's mind. All we have are our five sense which meet and mix in the brain.

If it isn't possible to do that, but you still hear someone else's thoughts, it could be an indication of a health issue. It couldn't hurt to talk to your doctor about it and get her or his opinion. If you aren't comfortable with that (I hate going to the doctor, lol), you should mention it to a family member or someone you trust, just to see what they think. I sure can't say I'm the #1 expert in the world, your family or friends might be able to explain it better than I can.

To summarize, what you're describing doesn't sound absurd. It's technologically impossible, but I don't doubt your honesty for a second. If you'd like to find out for yourself if there is, in fact, an RFID tag inside you, you can always buy a reader online and scan every inch of your body. You can easily find them for very little money on eBay. If you like the idea of being sure there isn't anything in your home taking your picture or listening to you, look into buying a 'bug detector'. Spies use them all the time for that exact reason.

If you have any questions that you think I could answer, please feel free to contact me and we can talk. I hope my comment helps ease your mind a little.