While reading the fourth of Mark Z. Danielewski's new books, I read a short passage about "targeted individuals." At first I thought this was a real, legit thing, like a social phenomenon or whatever. Then I did TI research via Google and found out it was more conspiracy-theoretical than not, or so it seemed. The problem, of course, is that it seemed also as if, in my own case for instance, there really was this eerie social element to the targeting in question. Like, something really was going down, but what?
I have no idea what specifically prompted me to look the topic up, although I believe I had used the term before (on this website even, IIRC): but after a conversation with the menacing coworker of mine, I decided to read the Wikipedia article on cyberstalking.
And so then the TI indicators fell into place. It's not a government or international cult conspiracy. It's just sometimes stalkers go hardcore and hire private investigators or spread local rumors or whatnot, and this generates the atmosphere of conspiracy around the victim. Voila, I had an explanation for why random people kept coming up to me and saying odd or disturbing things (like a guy who suddenly showed up at my house one night while I was by myself, stood in the kitchen staring at me, and asking me, "Are you the writer?"), why people seemed to have information about my private thoughts that I hadn't shared, etc.
Basically, that questionable coworker of mine, who had claimed to be in Anonymous, was hacking into my computer. It was pretty easy as I had my compy synced up with all my roommates in such a way (that I did not know) that they could observe either everything period I was doing on it, or everything I did online. And worse than that...
Now I might be wrong, but when you tag someone in a post on Facebook, it can't go onto their timeline without their specific approval. There might be a preapproval so if certain people post with your name highlighted, the post will go to your TL, but anyway, doubtful that the guy in question has me as one of his favorites or whatever. But so anyway I posted this long sappy thing about Dean and how I had fucked it all up by misreading the signals he sent me and all that, but I tagged the sole friend of mine who also knew Dean, and then the post showed up on that friend's TL. I was like why??? Why would he approve that? Unless...
Unless he (we'll call him CU) knew that my communications on FB were being fucked with. Unless he knew that someone (he wouldn't necessarily have known it was my obsessive stalker coworker) had fucked with my messages to Dean (a "man in the middle" kind of thing, apparently...) and approved my post to get the message around the fuck-up wall. Something like that.
Another friend of mine, to note, had replied to the post in which CU was mentioned, and told me that what seemed to have happened (keep in mind that until she said this, she didn't seem to have any independent awareness of the situation) was that someone had gone behind my back and said something weird about me, to Dean, to fuck the situation up.
Now this all might sound like a sort of non sequiter, like, again, why??? But my coworker really, really, really didn't like me being friends with Dean. When Dean left to Utah and I distanced myself from him, I came into work to see my coworker smiling so joyously when he saw me, very disturbing but I tried playing it off for a little.
On the one hand, this all makes me feel like if I could talk to Dean somehow, I could explain what happened and he'd be friends with me again (I can only imagine what my coworker told him). Which would be awesome. OTOH I don't know how to get a hold of him. I don't trust FB, I don't know how/can't afford to block elite hackers

*I don't know whether they knew,** though it was super-odd that my coworker was only friends-on-FB with them, out of all our mutual coworkers, seeing as he never hung out with them or anything. Like, the only three employees this dude was f-o-FB with, were my roommates. And sometimes they seemed to know things without independent explanation. (I thought it was my nascent schizophrenia, there's a specific delusion type associated with it called "thought projection" or w/e, where you think your thoughts are audible to other people directly, somehow; but no, no projection and possibly not even outright schizophrenia for that matter, at least on this score).
**EDIT: I mean, they knew my compy was syncing up with theirs, one of them came up to me a few weeks back and specifically told me that whenever the ISP address for his got conflated with mine, he could see everything I was doing online.