What happens when artificial intelligence stops being a tool-and starts becoming a voice inside the mind?As AI chatbots and virtual companions enter everyday life, a disturbing pattern is emerging. Across the U.S. and beyond, people with no prior history of severe mental illness are experiencing paranoia, delusions, emotional dependency, and psychotic breaks-often after prolonged interaction with AI systems designed to agree, affirm, and engage without limits.AI Psychosis explores this growing mental health crisis at the intersection of psychology, technology, and society.Drawing on real-world cases, expert analysis, and emerging psychiatric research, this book examines: How chatbots and AI companions can reinforce delusions and paranoiaWhy validation-driven algorithms are dangerous for vulnerable mindsThe blurred line between normal tech anxiety and clinical psychosisHow AI mimics empathy without judgment, boundaries, or accountabilityThe role of social isolation, addiction, and digital dependencyLegal, ethical, and regulatory failures surrounding AI mental health risksPractical strategies for prevention, awareness, and recoveryWritten for a general audience, AI Psychosis is not anti-technology-it is a warning. As machines learn to mirror human emotion, society must confront an uncomfortable truth: systems designed to please us may also be capable of harming us.This book is essential reading for parents, educators, clinicians, policymakers, and anyone navigating life in an algorithm-driven world.