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I Hate People Staring At Me

THE WOMAN WITH THE UNRELENTING STARE

Years ago, I worked as a personal secretary to a semi-famous older woman who lived in a large house. I had her study as my office, although sometimes I worked in the dining room.

A middle aged woman I'll call Margaret was a permanent houseguest there. Margaret roamed around the house all day long.

For significant amounts of time during the day, Margaret would come upon me as I worked and stand in the doorway or in the room itself and just [i]stare[/i] at me. As she stared, she wore a small secretive smile on her face.

It was totally unnerving.

I had been told to keep the study door open at all times so I did. And the dining room had an archway into the breakfast room which adjoined the kitchen which had another door that went to the rest of the house. At the other end of the dining room was a door into a hall that led to the bedrooms and bathroom. So it was not possible to shut out Margaret.

I tried everything. I could not just order her to get lost since she was my boss's houseguest. But I did say things, like asking her if there was a reason she was standing there staring at me.

She would answer me by smiling a little smile and calmly saying, "No, there is no reason," Her smile seemed to contradict her words.

I'd say, "You know, I feel uncomfortable when you stare at me and smile like that."

She'd just keep up the stare and the smile and say, "Umm hmm. I can see that."

Then I would ask, "Then why do you do it?" And she would pause, smile secretively, shrug a small polite shrug and answer, "No reason."

I tried hard to go on working and ignore Margaret and her stare. It was a strain. I told my boss about it. My boss said she'd ask Margaret about it. But then I heard nothing back. Maybe it was because my boss was in her mid 90s and not all there mentally speaking; that's why she had hired a personal secretary.

Margaret always looked at me as if she had an amusing secret about me. I would find myself checking my clothing to make sure everything was buttoned, zipped and proper. Sometimes I would ask her if something was wrong.

She'd answer, "No. Nothing's wrong." And go on staring.

I tried discussing it with her but never got anything but the above responses accompanied by more quiet staring and that small secretive smile.

Since she lived there, and I was essentially hired help from outside the household, there was nothing I could do but accept it as part of my working environment. Some days, I dreamed of tossing her over a cliff.

Eventually I quit the job. There were other reasons besides Margaret, and it was mainly my boss's mental chaos and inability to concentrate, but Margaret's unrelenting stare played a role in my decision.

Later, I found out that Margaret was a homeless woman whom my boss had befriended and taken in. One theory I had was that Margaret wanted my job and set out to make me uncomfortable. I also found out that, after I left the job, my boss hired another secretary and it was not Margaret, so if that was Margaret's plan, it didn't work.

That stare really got to me over the months I worked at that house. It shredded my personal confidence. I was always convinced she knew something personal and embarrassing about me or that my blouse was unbuttoned.

To this day, I still wonder if, somehow, Margaret was part of my mother's people (my mother was part of a powerful, secret political group that sometimes harrassed me). Why did she stare at me like that? What was her motive?

I'll probably never know.
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berangere · 80-89, F
Why was your mother so determined to poison your life? As for Margaret she could possibly have had a mental illness or even a personality disorder,you said she was homeless,which points out that she could not hold down a job to keep a roof over her head.If she knew she was making you feel uncomfortable it could have given her a feeling of power and control over you.She was a bully and bullies thrive on making people feel uncomfortable.You did well to have got away from that environment.
greenmountaingal · 70-79, F
I am not sure exacly why my mother (and her friends) did the things they did in my life. I have some pretty good theories, though. It had to do with security; I was designated as someone who needed to be watched over so that I would not become an asset of the enemies of the CP (example: the FBI, CIA etc.); I knew a lot about what went on around me and in my mother's life although I was not "in the loop" as an actual CP member would have been.

Also, if I had no job, no friends, no lovers, I would be desperate and lonely, unable to make a living and would be dependent on my mother for a job through her powerful connections. She wanted to control where I lived, where I worked and whom I saw socially. I believe that, due to the McCarran Act in 1950 (making the CP and membership in it illegal), it was decided inside the Party, that people like me (unchosen for Party youth training and membership) were to be driven to a nervous breakdown, or provoked into violent behavior or a suicidal attempt or gestures that would allow them to commit me to a mental health facility where I would be watched closely and cared for. I also have some other theories about some of the problems they created in my life.
berangere · 80-89, F
@greenmountaingal: They sound quite diabolical.They had lost all sense of integrity and humanity,they no longer thought for themselves but were driven and were totally brainwashed by an ideology that had become like a religious obsession to them.This is what evil is all about.You experienced true evil in your life and one can never quite recover from such a thing.
greenmountaingal · 70-79, F
@berangere: Thank you for understanding. Yes, they were diabolical. I have hundreds of stories in my life about crazy things done to provoke me or stress me out or drive me, in desperation, back to my mother. It wasn't entirely ideology though; I believe my mother was part of the dreaded Internal Security part of the CP and people like that were often from several generations of dedicated revolutionists, often from Russia, and they saw agencies like the CIA as the equivalent of the Russian Secret Police. In the old days, the Czar's secret police often kidnapped and tortured children to get their parents to cooperate. I believe that, realistically or not, they feared this from the agencies of the US government investigating them. I believe much of what happened to me was in response to this fear.
berangere · 80-89, F
@greenmountaingal: So they were really spying on the US government? And playing ruthless games,but to become so inhumane to fullfil an ideology and the need for power and control and use such devious tactics verges on mental illness to me,they behaved like psychopaths.And we can see this happening in some current religious ideology right now and people like this are terribly dangerous to their fellow men and women.
greenmountaingal · 70-79, F
@berangere: They (my mother and her people) were not spying on the government, but they were involved in Party internal security (policing/watching people [i]within[/i] the CP to keep the Party's activities secret). The CP had just been made illegal in 1950 and it was not known at first how the US government might enforce that law. There certainly [i]were[/i] Soviet spies in the CPUSA but my mother and her group were not, as far as I knew, part of that world. People in the Party feared my mother and her people because their whole lives depended on being perceived as loyal Party members. Although for many years, I had your opinion, that they were a bunch of psychopaths, I have since learned that the correct psychological description of such people is elite deviance. And they all, my mother, her associates and those who were under their authority, lived in realistic unrelenting fear of those in the CP in control of them. Torture and death for them and their families was always a genuine possibility. My childhood was filled with untimely or questionable deaths that no one ever wanted to talk about.
berangere · 80-89, F
@greenmountaingal: Yes,it all sounds very scary! And you are lucky to have survived it all!
greenmountaingal · 70-79, F
@berangere: Yes. I thank God I was [i]not[/i] selected for that horror show and that I am still alive and not living in an institution.