I know it's completely irrelevant to well, anything, but is it normal to be able to feel the EMR from a microwave oven? I don't feel like looking it up.
Woe, dude, sounds like time for a new nukriwave.
It could be you're responding to something else, or convince yourself that you're feeling something.It's not just mine! I can feel them, man, all of them! But usually if they aren't brand-new...
Maybe it's just vibrations from microwave oven's moving parts (that explains why is harder to feel brand-new ones). IMO it's not normal being able to feel microwave radiation.
You could make an experiment building a Faraday Cage around the oven (don't forget to ground well).
Other hypothesis is that you are sensitive to machinery's low frequency sound if that's true, then you would feel unwell near computers too. To test this, I would go to a room with all the cables unplugged and turned off computers, calculators, televisions, etc.... staying like that (sketching, playing cards, relaxing, solving any kind of paperwork, etc....) for some hours and see how it feels. IMO this last paragraph is a bit wild (and indeed taken from New Age'ers' beliefs) but it seems having at least a psychological impact to me.
Of course, this is a far different frequency and surely much more powerful.Less-than-lethal weaponry exists that uses millimeter waves to heat a thin layer of human skin to an intolerable temperature so as to make the targeted person move away. A two-second burst of the 95 GHz focused beam heats the skin to a temperature of 130 °F (54 °C) at a depth of 1/64th of an inch (0.4 mm).
(...) I discovered that the microwave door had a crack in it..... h:
I don't think microwaves can displace air like that... Are you sure you are not just feeling the air from the multiple fans in most microwaves?
Then people with humid skin are those that feel microwaves right?