Nikola Tesla — "I felt that I could not touch the hair of other people, except with gloves."
I felt that I could not touch the hair of other people, except with gloves.
I felt that I could not touch the hair of other people, except with gloves.
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"If I try to continue a broken line of thought, I feel a veritable spiritual nausea, then, almost by chance, I go over to another job, surprised by the freshness of mind and ease with which I overcome …"
"A man is born to work, to suffer and to fight; he who doesn't, must perish."
"I was educated in a monastery, and I read everything that came into my hands."
"I don't care that they stole my idea . . I care that they don't have any of their own."
"The harnessed power of the cosmos is the greatest gift we can bestow upon humanity."
Serbian-American inventor and electrical engineer whose alternating-current designs powered the modern electrical grid; died poor and largely forgotten. Closely associated with George Westinghouse (his AC-power business partner) and Mihajlo Pupin (fellow Serbian-American physicist at Columbia). For an intellectual contrast, see Thomas Edison, American inventor and direct-current advocate — Edison's direct-current power-distribution scheme was displaced by Tesla-Westinghouse AC in the 1890s 'War of Currents'. Edison ran a public-relations campaign electrocuting animals to discredit AC — the most famous engineering-ethics rivalry in American history. Tesla's AC won and powers nearly every electrical grid on Earth.
Reported idiosyncrasy, mentioned in biographies like 'Prodigal Genius' by O'Neill.
Date: Throughout his adult life
GeneralFound in 1 providers: grok
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A visceral aversion to touching other people's hair without a protective barrier — expressing a compulsive need to separate oneself from physical contact with others' bodies. In modern terms this describes mysophobia (contamination fear) or sensory processing sensitivity: the feeling that direct tactile contact with another person is intolerable without a buffer. It captures extreme bodily boundary-consciousness and the discomfort of perceiving other humans as physically threatening or repulsive.
Tesla was famously mysophobic and showed clear obsessive-compulsive traits throughout his life. He detested touching hair, pearls, and round objects, avoided handshakes, counted his steps, and performed entry rituals before buildings. His compulsions coexisted with his genius — rigid self-imposed rules may have focused his mind on electromagnetic research. These tendencies intensified with age; he spent his final decades in deliberate isolation in a New York hotel room, refusing most physical contact entirely.
Tesla lived through the germ theory revolution — Pasteur and Koch had newly proven microbes cause disease, triggering widespread hygiene anxiety across Western culture. Public health campaigns promoted cleanliness as moral virtue. The 1918 influenza pandemic killed 50 million globally, validating contact-transmission fears. Yet obsessive-compulsive behavior had no clinical framework then; what we now recognize as OCD or sensory processing disorder was simply labeled eccentricity or nervous temperament, offering no treatment or understanding for Tesla's suffering.
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