Spies, Spies, and… Stupid Police!

Let’s get one thing straight: spies are NOT stupid. I mean, come on, it’s literally in the job description. A spy who’s stupid? That’s like hiring a vegan butcher or a kleptomaniac security guard—it just doesn’t work! Spies are sleek, clever, and always one step ahead. They’re like cats: silent, sneaky, and just a little too smug about it.

Meanwhile, we have the police. And oh boy… Some of them are like toddlers with a magnifying glass, trying to crack a case but ending up chasing their own shadows. The young ones? Adorable. They think they’re going to “change the world,” but by lunchtime, they’ve either given up or found themselves knee-deep in some shady nonsense.

Welcome to your typical Sunday morning: spies plotting, police hesitating, organized crime growing, and, of course, millionaires casually sipping their overpriced lattes.

Dirty games make dirty millions—it’s just math, folks.

Honestly, sometimes organized crime feels like the most honest profession in the room.

But let’s rewind. It all starts with the vibe. You know the one—that unshakable feeling, like your gut’s on speakerphone screaming, “Something’s off!”

Forget psychology or manipulation tactics. The vibe beats them all, hands down.

Then comes the spin. Oh, the glorious spin! Your brain goes into overdrive like a hamster on an espresso-fueled wheel.

Neural networks firing, connections forming, neurons shouting, “YES HE DID IT!”

You don’t even know what you’re searching for, but BAM—you find it.

And what do you discover?

That someone—probably a spy—has been out there vibing their way through life, smiling like a Cheshire cat with a Gold necklace while wrecking everyone else’s plans.

Spies don’t care about ethics.

Ethics are for people with bedtime routines, not international agents with fake passports and a talent for ruining lives.

And the police? Oh, bless their hearts. They try.

They see what spies do and think, “We can do that too!” Spoiler: they can’t.

No training, no finesse, no idea what they’re doing. They’re like working immigrants trying to play chess, but with Monopoly pieces and no rulebook.

Corrupt them with money, and they’re done for. They’ll be on their way to shady deals faster than you can say, “Donut break.”

Flip a spy? Sure, you might convince one to work for your country.

But flip a corrupt cop? Forget it. They’re like a broken vending machine—out of order and full of junk.

So, what’s the solution? Sign up for the CIA? File a report on corrupt officers?

Nah, hard pass. The world’s a mess, my friend, and not even a spy can fix it.

So, here’s my advice: sit back, grab some coffee, and enjoy the chaos.

Just don’t invite me to your dirty games—I’ll be over here, minding my own business and laughing at the circus.

The Nurse Who Wouldn’t Be a Spy 💉🌱

🚨 An Ordinary Nurse in an Extraordinary Situation

She describes herself as “just an ordinary nurse.” But what happened that day was far from ordinary.

One man approached from the front, hand hidden in his pocket. Another hovered behind her. No words, just a feeling — a sharp, unmistakable instinct: danger. ⚠️

For years, she had worked as a nurse 👩‍⚕️, trained to notice small changes in patients — a glance, a hesitation, a shift in tone. But these skills were meant for healing ❤️, not espionage.

“I’m not a spy. I’ve never been one. Never wanted to be one.”


🌿 A Simple Life, Far from the Shadows

Her dreams are simple:

  • 👩‍⚕️ Work three shifts a week
  • 💵 Collect a paycheck
  • 👨‍👩‍👧 Support her eccentric family
  • 🌱 Grow vegetables in her garden
  • 🏡 Buy a small house and live quietly

Yet somehow, the shadows of the intelligence world 🕵️‍♀️ have brushed against her life.


🕵️ Respect for Spies, Refusal to Join

She respects spies — their ability to read people, influence conversations, and navigate danger. But her stance is firm:

“You will never use me as an asset. I love life, not dirty games.” 💔

She believes:

  • 🕊️ Intelligence should protect people, not power
  • 🌍 Israel and Palestine must both be free
  • 🙅‍♀️ Corruption has no place in any country

🎒 The Backpack Incident That Changed Everything

The turning point came when someone touched her backpack 🎒 — a move she immediately analyzed.

“You burned yourself. Assuming I wouldn’t notice was your mistake.”

Her instincts are natural, not trained. She doesn’t hate those in the intelligence community — she even calls them “beautiful” and “intelligent.” But her boundaries are unshakable.


🤝 Her Message

“You can save the world in your way. I’ll save it in mine.” 🌎💙

She returns to her world:

  • The hum of hospital corridors 🏥
  • The earthy smell of her garden 🌱
  • The warmth of a quiet life 🕯️

She remains watchful — not as part of the game, but as the woman who walked away from it.

The non-spy nurse 🚫🕵️ — who refused to be recruited.

Confessions of a Gangstalked Nobody: Surviving Stalkers, Spies & Street Circus

Welcome to my glamorous life as a reluctant cast member in a real-life crime-thriller-meets-comedy, filmed live in the streets of a “totally-not-suspicious” city.

You know the kind — where corruption oozes out of the sidewalks, crime networks own more businesses than actual businesspeople, and dirty intelligence agents pretend to be anything.

This is the story of my life — or what’s left of it between dodging stalkers and losing jobs to cartel coverups.


☠️ Meet My Stalker: The Man, The Myth, The Smirker

He’s always there. I walk out of my apartment, and BAM — there he is.

Mr. Smiley McCreep. Grinning like he just saw his favorite conspiracy theory come true.


He lives across the street. Or maybe it’s just one of his portals.

Honestly, I think he has a teleportation device.

No matter which route I take — straight, sideways, parkour — he finds me like a glitch in the Matrix with an unhealthy obsession.

Yesterday I outsmarted him. Or so I thought. Took a side alley with no cameras, no witnesses, no pigeons. Felt like James Bond.

Until he showed up mid-alley, smiling like it was our scheduled coffee date.


Creepy? Yes. Coincidence? Not a chance.


🧾 My Resume?
A Criminal Documentary

I’ve worked in so many “normal” places that turned out to be fronts for organized crime, I should add Organized Crime HR Survivor to my LinkedIn.

You try to get a job, pay rent, and build a future.

But somehow every job I land is conveniently crawling with shady characters, bugged boardrooms, or intelligence agents pretending to sell insurance.

I’ve basically worked for every acronym you’ve never heard of.


👮‍♀️ Police?
Oh, You Sweet Summer Child

“Just go to the police,” they say.

Sure! Let me just walk into that nice building run by the same people organizing my misery.
The guy behind the desk is probably in five group chats with my stalker, my HR, and an International smuggler named “Godknowshow”.

You report a crime, they nod, smile, and then forget your name — unless it’s to add you to their watchlist.

Spoiler: there is no help.


🙃 Trust Is Dead. Long Live Craziness.

I used to be open. Trusting. Social. I had conversations. Friends. Faith in humanity.

Then I met Reality: Population “Me”, and about 400 corrupt “coincidences.”

Now I trust no one. And I highly recommend it.

In this city, “trust” is a tool. People will use your honesty to twist you into knots and sell the footage to the highest bidder.

Once trust is gone? You can’t work. Can’t talk.

Can’t even take a peaceful walk without wondering who’s watching and what script you missed.


📣 Dear World: I See You Laughing. But I’m Not Joking.

Yes, it sounds funny. Like a movie. But that’s the point. They want you to think it’s all a joke. That I’m the crazy chick.

But behind the absurdity, there’s truth: a deep, rotting system where crime is the system.
Where the only safe people are the ones who’ve given up everything — including their lives.

They call it “order.” I call it psychological warfare with a public socialist system.


🎤 Final Word From Your Local Conspiracy Victim

They said: “You’re crazy.”

I said: “Crazy people don’t collect photographic evidence and pattern analysis spreadsheets, Komrad Milady with a dick”

They said: “You’ll be safe if you just obey.”

I said: “I’m allergic to blind obedience. Also, the Wi-Fi is terrible in fear socialist prisons.”

They want silence. I’m choosing voice.

This post? It’s for the others.

The watchers, the followed, the “coincidence victims.”
You’re not alone.
And you’re not crazy.

You’re just stuck in a city that runs on crime, smiles, and the loud hum of dirty socialist surveillance .


Peace, good “craziness” , and plotting escape routes,
— StoriesofStories

📸 P.S. Yes, I have pictures. No, I won’t post them here — yet.

The Joyero Encounter

Navigating the spring craziness is not as easy as you might think.

Once again, the same scenario unfolds: grocery shopping interrupted by the usual suspects—ICE, spies, Jews, and a jeweler.

And there it is, the same bus, the same meeting style. This time, a JOYERO (jeweller)

What caught my eye? His handcrafted jewelry or the situation itself.?

The bus never waits at that station. Never! But this time, it did.

Was it waiting for me?

I question everything unusual, so I questioned this too.

My alert system was on instantly. What the hell is with this bus?

Then I started scanning around.

I scanned to my right and left, focusing on those in close proximity, the most urgent ones.

On the right, a British man, whom I’ll call “Right Sunshine.” His fingers, his face, and the damned smell of alcohol masked by cheap perfume.

He seemed more concerned with adjusting his hat than hiding his alcohol scent.

But okay, brother, your lifestyle is your own.


I became scared and more aware.

There are probably more of them. I scanned further.

Straight ahead, another British person with two silver flower brooches. (What do those pins symbolize in gang slang? I need to learn more about this.)

She had an immortal face, my British Pins lady—or was she even a lady? I think not.


But on the left, there he was. THE him!

The jeweler, or as he called himself, the Joyero.

To make sense of this charade, I decided to start with him.

“What beautiful rings you have!” I yelled across the bus. He smiled! I made him happy!
He wanted JOY, he had JOY! LOL

I had made a jeweler happy, though I didn’t know it at the time.

I noticed how shyly he moved to another chair to avoid eye contact. Wrong move, old boy! I can see everything! Catched you!

Then questions started swirling in my head: Who will get off at the station with me, and how will I approach them—the one with the pins, the one who smells of wine, or the jeweler?

And as if the craziness needed to escalate, at the last two bus stops, two young Latinos sat in front of me, one wearing a “Steven Madden” bag. LOL

I thought, “Fuck, this is real craziness.”

Keeping my eyes open, I got off at my usual station with the Joyero in front of me.

I caught up to him at the crosswalk; he let me catch him.

Then I understood. What the fuck! This man is a professional! But who is he, and why is he doing this?

I approached him, my backpack full of groceries and a heavy bag of potatoes in hand, and started complimenting his rings.

This time, he said he couldn’t speak English, so I began speaking in my broken Spanish.

Is someone listening to and recording my phone in real time? It seems so! Joyero was cautious!

I don’t know who he is—crazy or a spy—but he told me he is THE JEWELER -JOYERO! He told me he made his own jewelry.

And I have never seen silver rings more beautiful than his! Ever in my life! And I am passionate about silver jewelry. He said he is from El Salvador, but he looked more Chinese than Salvadorian with his large, rare grey beard.

Definitely a disguise!

Whether he was a spy, an ICE agent (playing on “ice” as jewelry), a Jew, a crazy jeweler, a member of organized crime, or part of some secret society—that man was afraid to speak English and had the most beautiful rings.

It was him, THE LORD OF THE RINGS?

Who knows!

Let your soul speak to people, and they will speak to you—as best they can, for their protection and yours.

You must know just what you need to know.

Today was about THE Jeweler! EL JOYERO!

Who were the others? I’ll think about that later.