nudone
New Member
- Reaction score
- 0
- Location
- Derbyshire, UK
got a call out yesterday to go and see a woman that turned out to be clinically insane.
i had a feeling the call might even be a prank/hoax when she phoned:
1. she phoned my personal number, i.e. not business number (no idea where she got my home number from).
2. she asked for a completely different company name to what i use.
3. she said people were taking control of her computer so she wanted it factory resetting. oh, and the keyboard and mouse were being switched off by mysterious forces.
anyway, went and looked at the problem. too much to repeat here really.
she believes the local "crooked" police force are breaking into her house and tampering with things: her computer, here mobile phone, her letters, you name it.
she's keeping photographic evidence of all the "illegal" activity on her computer. her solicitor has duplicates of all this data.
the computer makes a "loud" noise sometimes as does the scanner/printer. obviously this is due to people "taking control of the machine".
she showed some of the "illegal" activity going on with her computer. one thing was trying to delete folders that had programs running from inside them - so obviously you can't delete the folders. she interpreted the error messages as someone was in control of her computer - and therefore wouldn't let her delete stuff.
there's more madness but i decided to make my excuses and say i'd return the following day to sort her computer out. this was just so i could escape really. my thinking was, that no matter what i did to her computer, she'd probably just think i was part of the conspiracy - so she'd become a nuisance phoning me up when she found her computer still under the control of mysterious agencies. essentially, there was nothing wrong with her machine - it was just her 100% paranoia.
i didn't charge for the call out. seemed unfair to take money from someone so mentally ill. you may say i could have tried to explain to her that there was nothing wrong or to fear - but the problem was her whole world not just the computer. she explained that other pc repair people had tried to help but they were useless as the trouble hadn't gone away.
(she told me about her time in hospital and attempted suicide and all that so i know she just couldn't help herself. it was a crazy/amusing call out - but kind of tragic when you think about it. she obviously lives in a frightening world. oh, her husband had obviously given up trying to tell her there was no problem - unless he was equally disturbed - don't know.)
anyway, i thought i'd mention it just to see what the normal response is to this kind of customer. i think i've got away from bringing myself more trouble.
i had a feeling the call might even be a prank/hoax when she phoned:
1. she phoned my personal number, i.e. not business number (no idea where she got my home number from).
2. she asked for a completely different company name to what i use.
3. she said people were taking control of her computer so she wanted it factory resetting. oh, and the keyboard and mouse were being switched off by mysterious forces.
anyway, went and looked at the problem. too much to repeat here really.
she believes the local "crooked" police force are breaking into her house and tampering with things: her computer, here mobile phone, her letters, you name it.
she's keeping photographic evidence of all the "illegal" activity on her computer. her solicitor has duplicates of all this data.
the computer makes a "loud" noise sometimes as does the scanner/printer. obviously this is due to people "taking control of the machine".
she showed some of the "illegal" activity going on with her computer. one thing was trying to delete folders that had programs running from inside them - so obviously you can't delete the folders. she interpreted the error messages as someone was in control of her computer - and therefore wouldn't let her delete stuff.
there's more madness but i decided to make my excuses and say i'd return the following day to sort her computer out. this was just so i could escape really. my thinking was, that no matter what i did to her computer, she'd probably just think i was part of the conspiracy - so she'd become a nuisance phoning me up when she found her computer still under the control of mysterious agencies. essentially, there was nothing wrong with her machine - it was just her 100% paranoia.
i didn't charge for the call out. seemed unfair to take money from someone so mentally ill. you may say i could have tried to explain to her that there was nothing wrong or to fear - but the problem was her whole world not just the computer. she explained that other pc repair people had tried to help but they were useless as the trouble hadn't gone away.
(she told me about her time in hospital and attempted suicide and all that so i know she just couldn't help herself. it was a crazy/amusing call out - but kind of tragic when you think about it. she obviously lives in a frightening world. oh, her husband had obviously given up trying to tell her there was no problem - unless he was equally disturbed - don't know.)
anyway, i thought i'd mention it just to see what the normal response is to this kind of customer. i think i've got away from bringing myself more trouble.