 He has hooded eyes and a scowl. No, no, he's jaws-wider. Yeah, that's him. I didn't believe that Ayers gets three in a row first. What I could hear was like a laughing voice, and I used to, like, walk the corridors, like, trying to find out who was laughing. Then it, you know, it started to speak, and that's when it become very derogatory. I can feel unsafe, even in my own home. If I'm reading a book, I say, she's reading a book. She can't read the book, she's doing this. And it's in, like, a whisper. So you've got a constant whisper of the voices telling each other what I'm doing. I can't explain how anxious and stressful and exhausting it is to deal with it. It takes over your whole life. There's a high stigma against my condition. As soon as someone knows that you've got paranormal schizophrenia, they immediately think that you're a danger to them. The most helpful thing that I ever received was the avatar therapy. I was enrolled in the first Avatar 1 trial. So you work with your therapist to create a computerised avatar that is near to my voice that I hear and see. The therapist, his voice, will go through the avatar. Then the avatar becomes less aggressive and passive. And then we work through strategies to be able to stand up to the voice. Now I am a consultant. I'm on a panel. And we present with fellow research assistants. We do a lot of work together. It involves psychiatrists, psychologists, pharmacists. It's really valuable to have all of us in a team. We are all really equal. There's always, like, hope that in the future that the research one day will come that far, that we'll be able to stop the voices, hopefully in my lifetime.