It’s been ten years since my life changed, ten years since I fell under the watchful eyes of people who saw me not as a person but as a problem to be monitored, controlled, and kept in line.
I live in a place where power is dirty and the alliances even dirtier. A place where everyone seems bound by invisible threads of loyalty to something sinister.
They call it “socialism” here, but there’s little in the way of equality or justice. Instead, there are powerful networks, hidden hands, and people who think they own your life if you dare to say, “No.”
It started when I turned down an offer—an offer that seemed harmless on the surface. “Just work with us,” they said. “You’ll help keep things running smoothly.”
They didn’t say it outright, but I knew what it was—a way to bring me into their fold, to make me another pawn in their system of quiet corruption.
And then, when I turned them down, the real nightmare began.
A Life Under the Microscope
Saying no meant something different to them. To me, it was just an answer, but to them, it was a threat, a betrayal. “If she’s not with us, maybe she’s against us.”
Suspicion became a constant presence, and then came the questions—the quiet, invasive kind.
They would come up to me on the street, stop me in the grocery store, or “run into me” in a café. Friendly questions about my work, my life, my friendships. All innocent enough, but the questions were a little too personal, a little too pointed. And no matter where I went, they always seemed to know where I was.
Then the questions started changing, becoming sharper, less polite. “What were you doing last night?” they’d ask with a hint of accusation. “Who were you talking to?” And they would watch my reaction, studying my face, like they were dissecting my mind, waiting to catch me in a lie or find something they could use.
Over time, the questions turned into interrogation. They didn’t even pretend it was friendly anymore. They would come into my space, force me into situations where I couldn’t escape their scrutiny. I was innocent, but that didn’t seem to matter.
They would use what I’ve come to know as the Reid Technique—a strategy of manipulation, a way to break someone down without laying a hand on them. They’d ask questions, interrupt any answer, make accusations, twist words until I was questioning my own reality. It’s a method usually used on criminals. But I was no criminal—I was just someone who refused to be part of their game.
Losing Myself to the System
At first, I tried to stand up to them. I was firm, I held my ground. But after a while, their constant scrutiny wore me down. Every time I left my house, I felt like someone was watching, waiting to pounce.
The confident strong American Nurse grew anxious in public, feeling like my every move was under a magnifying glass. SOCIALISM! Corruption! Dirty law enforcement ! And organized crime! My round around the subject! Even in my own home, I felt their presence, like a shadow that refused to leave.
My car, my phone, my email—everything felt like it was being monitored.
It didn’t take long before I started doubting my own sanity. “Maybe I’m overreacting,”
I’d tell myself, but deep down, I knew I wasn’t. They were always there, waiting for me to break, watching my life through some invisible lens. Personal things started to disappear. Bullies grow. Friends stopped calling, family members grew distant—they either didn’t understand or, worse, started to believe the lies and insinuations that were planted around me.
No Place for Justice
The worst part? There was no one to turn to. Reporting it was useless because they were the system. The police corrupted were in on it, the officials corrupted looked the other way, and everyone else just shrugged. This is the way things work here, they would say, almost with pity in their eyes. I’d become someone who stood out, someone who didn’t fit into their mold, and so, I was treated as the enemy.
Even a dirty corrupted police officer dared to tell me “go back to school, who do you think you are? An American? You are not a good enough nurse for our socialist system!”.
But I would have been if I was part of your league, wouldn’t it? came to my mind.
I never thought something like this could happen—this constant state of being watched, of having your mind pulled in every direction until you’re left doubting yourself. I began to feel like a ghost, drifting through a world that once felt familiar but now felt like a prison without walls.
Ten Years
After ten years of this, I’ve lost so much. My privacy, my sense of peace, my friends, and sometimes, my own voice. They haven’t broken me, but they’ve left scars that won’t fade. I’ve come to understand what psychological abuse feels like, the kind that doesn’t leave bruises but cuts you down just the same.
I can’t say I know how to fix this, but I know what needs to change.
People need a country to go when the system fails them.
I know now that interrogation techniques like the Reid Technique, when misused, are weapons as real as any, turning ordinary lives into battlegrounds.
We need oversight, transparency, and a system that actually serves the people it’s supposed to protect.
Without that, the damage and people like me are left to fend for ourselves in silence.
A Path to Freedom
Through it all, I’ve found hope in people who refuse to give up, people who stand up for themselves and others despite the risks. And I know this won’t last forever.
The people running any corrupted socialist system think they’re untouchable, but every system has its breaking point, every network of corruption has its weak links.
I believe in something better—something honest and fair, where power can’t just hide behind elegant smiles, twisted words and a lot of dirty money.
Maybe I’m still here because I know that if enough of us see the truth and share our stories, they won’t be able to keep us in silence forever.
We deserve better, and no matter what they do, I won’t stop believing in a day when their grip on people like me finally breaks.
Until then, I hold on to the hope that, someday soon, we’ll find a way to bring the truth to light and reclaim our lives from those who would control them in the shadows.
And maybe, just maybe, that will be enough to break the chains that have kept so many of us silent for too long.