Let's Not Meet: A True Horror Podcast - 2x16: Indoctrination - Let's Not Meet
Episode Date: September 30, 2019Stories in this episode: When I was 7 an adult neighbor tried to indoctrinate me into a cult - BlownRadiation He is not your son - Anon Tango Out - Seco4800 Sponsored by Shudder: To try Shudd...er free for 30 days, go to shudder.com and use promo code meet. Follow Let's Not Meet: Facebook - https://www.facebook.com/groups/433173970399259/ Twitter - https://twitter.com/letsnotmeetcast Website - http://letsnotmeetpodcast.com Patreon - http://patreon.com/letsnotmeetpodcast Merch - Twitch - https://www.twitch.tv/crypticcounty  Â
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My name is Andrew Tate and this is season two episode 16 of Let's Not Meet, a true horror podcast. When I was seven, I lived in a dusty vacant part of the West with an atmosphere straight
out of a Judy Bloom novel.
Despite everyone on my neighborhood living on large lots, isolated plots of land, mostly
ranching families, kids played hockey in the streets.
Crime was minimal to non-existent
and everybody knew everybody else. I had a tight knit group of friends, names changed
to protect privacy, obviously. Let's call them Shirley, Natalie, and Bailey. We'd been
friends since before we could walk, mostly because we were the same age and all lived in the same neighborhood. We weren't idiots, but we definitely were sheltered.
The same could be said for our parents, many of them,
into their education after high school or even a bit sooner, and grew up in similar
if not the exact same community, where anyone who'd shake your hand was probably trustworthy.
That's why no one had noticed anything before it was too late.
Just before the summer started, a new family moved in.
Families moving in wasn't terribly uncommon, but this family had a girl my age, so it became
a big deal.
Her name was Ella, and her whole family was a bit strange.
It took two weeks for them to introduce themselves to anyone. Plenty of people went over to introduce
themselves, but even when it was obvious, people were home, no one came to the door.
Finally, work got around that the father was a minister at some church no one in town had heard of, and the wife was working part-time as a tailor.
We spent a lot of time outside and eventually spotted Ella, my friends and I, and we invited
her to join our group in whatever we were up to that afternoon.
Through that, we learned that she had four older brothers and an infant sister.
She and her whole family had very
Antiquated gender roles prayed before and about virtually anything they did and would casually mention the end of the world as a non-sequitur
Despite this they managed to establish themselves as pillars of the community. The father, let's call him Mr.
Cyrus, came to every town hall and his wife Mrs. Cyrus took up a leadership role in the PTA.
I think their wholesome Christian image helped defray what could have been otherwise a deeply
troubling outburst of rage that Mr. Cyrus would exhibit, sometimes right out
in public.
He'd hear another adult, use a phrase like, God damn it, and fly into a frenzy about
how dare you forsake your Lord and Savior, taking his name in vain.
His wife would make unsolicited judgmental calls about how other people raised their kids,
especially daughters.
Despite all that, within a few months, you'd never know they hadn't lived their all their
lives.
The unspoken understanding in this town was if you left your kids and someone else's
care, they had free reign to do whatever they thought best for them, and feed them, instruct them, and discipline them, same as they were their own.
The first time that I went to Ella's, nothing was out of the ordinary.
The second time, Mr. Cyrus led all of us in prayer before we ate our snack and afterward.
I mentioned to my mom how I found it irritating, and she basically said,
they're house, they're rules. So I shrugged it off. Neither of us had any way to know that Mr.
Cyrus was testing the waters. A few weeks later, several of our families had gotten together,
and Mr. Cyrus brought a rifle out of nowhere and asked us girls if we wanted to shoot some cans.
He said to the parents, once he'd gotten us excited, I mean, if you're comfortable with
guns, remember this is rural America.
Not one of us girls hadn't already fired a gun in our lives, and if any of the parents
were uncomfortable about guns, they would never admit it in public.
Things progressed a little by little every time I went over.
Within the next few visits, my friends and I were made to participate in a mini-bible
study lesson.
I guess one of the other girls had told their parents about the prey because when they
were dropped off, Mr. Cyrus said, oh, I forgot to mention.
I leaned and I had a family Bible study plan for
tonight.
If you're uncomfortable with that, you can bring the girls back another night.
This was the West in the 80s.
Christianity was the default, and even people who really didn't practice felt obligated
to pretend that they did.
No one in this town would have objected to their kids
participating in a Bible study, loud enough for anyone to hear. It didn't matter because
the Bible study was sort of fun. None of us complained about it, and we'd all seen how
into it L-assemed, and wouldn't have wanted to hurt her feelings by complaining about it. I think
Mr. Cyrus took that as one of the final go-aheads that was needed.
In late August, Mrs. Cyrus called my parents and friends' parents and asked if we wanted
to have a sleep over with Ella. Everyone agreed. The first red flag flew up right away.
Most of us girls spent half of our days off
from school doing farm chores and helping around the house. So we were all in jeans. I had never
seen Ella and Pants ever. But what we wore had never been any sort of problem. When we got there
this time, though, Ella had laid out four of her dresses on the bed
and told us to change into them.
To quote unquote, look more like girls.
We all liked playing dress-up, so we changed without complaint, but when we went downstairs,
Mr. Cyrus said, look how lady-like you all are now.
Doesn't that feel better?
You've made God very happy.
At this point, in a plight-ate, we'd usually go out back and make mud pies or play tag
or something. But instead, Mr. Cyrus jumped right into the Bible lesson. He was basically
giving a sermon and talked about heaven and hell and the ways to get into heaven and the ways to get into hell.
He scared our seven-year-old minds half to death about the fires of hell.
Then he did what I can only describe as cartoony attempts at hypnosis.
This was years ago, so it was a little fuzzy, but he dangled some piece of jewelry,
a necklace or something, in front of us, and swung it back and forth. While he did that,
he recited Bible verses about telling the truth and repentance, and the end times,
and clean souls entering the glory of heaven. He said us all down on the couch. We were all thoroughly freaked out at
this point by the heaven hell talk, but we figured everything else was just a religious ritual of
their home because he'd been so careful to desensitize us over the past few months. He talked
about sin and repentance and asked us if we wanted to go to heaven or hell. I think you can guess what we all said. He said the only way to get into heaven was to be baptized.
One of my friends, surely, said she had already been baptized, but Mr. Cyrus cut them off.
Baptized into real faith. God's faith, he said. He asked if we wanted to know how we could become baptized and we said yes.
He said by confessing our sins and making them right with God, committing to living a
Christ-like way and most importantly accepting Jesus as our Lord and Savior.
Sounded easy enough to us.
For the next, I don't know how long, there were no clocks in this house,
and it was after dark by then. We did basically an intense Bible study. It could have been
anywhere between 10 minutes and 4 hours, when you're little, and not accustomed to going
to church, any amount of Bible study feels like an eternity. This always enters first
with different prayers for our salvation and making
different promises about rejecting sin and resisting temptation. We were all getting very tired
and feeling our patience wearing thin for tolerating others' religious beliefs.
Then there was a whole bunch of prepper stuff, different types of guns,
And there was a whole bunch of prepper stuff, different types of guns, talking about growing your own food and the importance of self-reliance.
Basically a lecture on survival skills, but with constant emphasis on the greatest survival
skill being a good Christian.
He kept us up most of the night after that praying and such.
He did some ritual blessing with rubbing
oil on our foreheads.
He vaguely talked on and off throughout the night about a wonderful place and lots of
other kids who love Christ.
And he said that he'd ask our parents about taking us there on a weekend trip.
I knew when I was agreeing with him that I had no interest, but my mom had taught me the
polite thing to do when you get an invitation to do something you have no interest in doing.
You just smile and express interest.
Then closer to the date, you can say something came up.
He didn't feed us anything the entire time we were there.
By the time it started to get light out, we were baptized in the backyard.
Then we finally fell asleep and a few hours later, we were picked up.
I told my mom I didn't want to go back there because he was too religious.
I told her we were up a lot of the night praying.
I told my mom there was no food also, but since I'm such a picky eater, she was too
used to hearing
they had nothing to eat. When I really just meant something like they served meatloaf and
wouldn't even make me a grilled cheese to eat instead. We stopped playing with Ella and just kind
of put it behind us until high school,ing once every few years, remember that weird religious play date?
Since we didn't really understand any of the promises that we had made to Mr. Cyrus,
we didn't pay half a mind to keeping any of them.
We were exhausted and surrounded in daily life by Jesus Rhetoric that everyone took seriously
in the moment, and then ignored
once the preacher was out of earshot.
In high school, it was heavily rumored that Ellis' father, Mr. Cyrus, had someone over,
famed for her involvement in the controversial Brant's Dividians, visiting his home and
leading some sort of prayer circle for him and the people of his church. While I still don't know if she really came to visit him, it was all, but you're refutably
confirmed in high school that Mr. Cyrus belonged to an offshoot of Shepard's Rod,
the Christian apocalyptic extremist group rooted in Seventh Day Adventism.
Nobody really talked to them much after that, in town even, because we all considered
it a cult.
I went out of state after high school and had no idea what happened to Ellis' family,
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It was a nice summer day. I decided to take my nephew to the park. The park was quite
lonely apart from a mom with her daughter and grandmother and a homeless man searching
through the trash bins. I debated on staying due to not enough people being there, but I did decide
to stay. More families would soon be arriving, I told myself. I sat on a bench as I watched
my nephew play. Everything seemed perfectly normal until I got an uneasy feeling of being
watched. I looked around but saw no one in ignored my feeling.
My nephew asked for me to race with him. I suggested that we race from a tree to the
restrooms all the way back to the playground. I suggested that we race from a tree by
the restrooms all the way back to the playground. How I regret this decision, no. As we left the playground, I heard a woman
yell out a name. She kept yelling the name. I ignored it. The name wasn't mine, or
my nephews. We reached the tree with the lady who was yelling out the name. She was approaching
us. I assumed she was going to pass by, but she paused and spoke to me. Do you know me?"
She said with a look of concern.
I replied, No.
Why did I even respond?
She then turned to speak to my nephew.
Do you remember me?
I was calling out for you.
At this point I knew she was hallucinating or something. She began to call him by the
name that she had previously mentioned. She then reached for him. I grabbed my nephew and
started to leave. She begged for him to come back. She didn't follow us but kept yelling
for him. She would only yell to him. She claimed that she was his mom, how I was a liar, how I took him from her,
when he was a baby. I noticed that she had begun to follow us. The distance from the tree
to the playground felt like miles apart. I could hear my nephew asking to go home.
I decided not to go to my car, I wanted to be where people were. She began to frantically yell,
give me my son.
We finally reached the playground.
I felt safe here assuming that she would not try anything
with others watching.
I didn't ask for help.
I must have been in shock.
The others began to assume something was wrong
once my nephew was crying,
and I tried to calm him down.
The woman kept her distance, but still trying to convince him to go to her.
I regret talking back to her, but I did, and said, he's not your son, now leave us alone,
before I call the police. In this moment, her facial expression changed.
Her eyes, they looked like they were filled with years of anger.
She charged forward.
She grabbed my hair, but I was able to get her off.
A mom that was nearby approached us, and the woman quickly walked off.
I began to down my mom when she began circling us.
She no longer was after my nephew but fixated on me.
She yelled at me.
Your next baby, I'll rip from your uterus.
You'll bleed when I snatch him away.
I'll come for you.
You're not a good mother.
I am, but they think I'm not.
She would remain circling, continuing, threatening me
about my unborn child.
I was still on the line with the police
detailing all her movements.
They wouldn't arrive until five more minutes.
A nearby elderly woman told her
that the cops were on the way.
She then headed towards a parking lot.
We lost track of her.
No one wanted to go after her.
We all remained together until the police arrived.
They did end up searching the area that they didn't find her.
They said there wasn't much that they could do, but patrol the area to see if she would
appear again.
I'm glad no one was harmed, but I still feel anxious driving by that part.
I get that uneasy feeling, although I'm inside my car, and it scares me to think she was
probably watching us.
I'm sure it was her who I felt earlier.
She hasn't been found.
At this point, I have moved on
and I'm just hoping that she hasn't committed
another incident like mine with another person.
But lady who claimed that I stole her son
and threatened to snatch my unborn
child, let's never ever meet again.
It all started about a month ago.
As I was sitting out on my front porch having a cigarette, a random man pops up from around
my bushes and walks right up to me.
He's pretty tan, slim, but fit-build to him.
Probably about 5'7.
Walks up and casually asks, hey, I couldn't bother you for one of those, right?
It was random at the time, but I didn't mind.
I pulled another smoke out, handed it to him, and offered my lighter if he needed it.
No, don't worry, Sarge.
I don't need it," he said.
As soon as he said that, he turned around, placed the cigarette into the branches on the
bush and walked across the street to the house that faces ours.
I said there quietly as he did all of this.
Why would he ask me for a smoke and then put it in the bush and walk away?
Weird, but I don't live in the best area so I took the smoke and went back inside.
Little did I know that wasn't going to be the last time he does something strange.
Two weeks passed without any problems. My sister brings my niece and nephew over for
my mother and I to watch them one Friday night. We got them to settle down to a movie when
my dogs dart toward the door, their hair standing up on the backs of their necks.
But they weren't barking.
I shoe them away from the front door, since they're known for getting excited about anything
that they hear out front.
No sooner did I turn my back to the door, two knocks thumped on the front door behind
me.
I slowly open the front door, and see the cigarette guy standing there on my
porch. A wide grin plastered across his face. I opened the screen door and stepped out
front with him. Now let me clarify, I'm a giant, I'm 6'5, 300 pounds and I have some martial
arts background behind me, but when I stood there in front of him, my fight-or-flight response
went haywire. I felt the blood rush out of my head and hands and into my feet, which
is something I rarely felt before. He set there smiling, doing nothing else. I asked him
if I can help him. He reaches into his pocket and pulls out a pack of camels and opens them towards me.
There were three cigarettes poking out.
Hey, Sarge, you want a cigarette?
Why does he keep calling me Sarge?
I tell him I'm good, I have my own smokes, and it looks like he's almost out anyways.
He smiles and vanishes instantly, as eyes seem to be completely glazed over.
I want out. It caught me by surprise. Everything. I want out. Tango out," he said.
He starts rocking back and forth, repeating. I want out. tango out. I can't begin to tell you the thoughts
that were going through my head at this point. I'm speechless. Hey, Sarge, can you get
me out of everything? The military, the FBI, make it all go away, please, sir. At that
moment, I remember that my mother, niece, and nephew are right on the other side
of the door.
And this guy seems like he's about to lose it.
Without a second thought, I placed my hand on his shoulder, and stopped him from rocking.
I asked him if everything is okay.
He stares back at me for a while, before another smile breaks over his face.
Hey, yeah, yeah, he says, he turns his attention toward the front window.
The blinds are shut, but he's focused heavily on them.
As I noticed this, and was about to say something, he says, gotta get back to the field,
tango out.
He pulled away and sprinted across the street
to that house.
I stood there dumbfounded.
I couldn't believe what just happened
in those short couple of minutes.
I hop inside and lock the door.
My mother is staring at me so confused,
so I tell her about everything that just happened.
The weird thing is, we know the woman who lives across the street.
She lives alone.
Where did this guy come from?
My mother and I decided to call him Tango out after that incident.
Here's the part that really sent me over the edge of this guy, though.
We got a hold of the woman across the street and got some information about him.
He's the son of her friend.
They haven't been able to find a
place to live. He's apparently an extremely paranoid schizophrenic. He's never been in the military
nor the FBI. His mother has no idea how his mental state deteriorated to such a severe degree.
She assured us that he's harmless and that he's only a danger to himself.
She assured us that he's harmless and that he's only a danger to himself. Well, last week, my mother and her boyfriend decided to go hang out with some family so I was
home alone with the two dogs.
I don't usually watch Netflix, but I heard in Vader's Zim had a new movie, so I sat
in the living room sofa and was there for about an hour and a half. The entire time I was watching,
which was about 1130 to 1245,
I kept seeing something outside my front window
in the corner of my eye.
My dog's made no movement, and it was quite windy,
so I brushed it off as moving trees or something.
I finished the movie and flipped the TV off. I stand to stretch,
and once again I catch something out of the corner of my eye. This time though, my dogs went straight
to the door and stood at alert. I was about to go out for a smoke anyways, so I make my way to
the window to show my dogs that my mom and dad weren't home yet.
And that's when I saw him, standing on my porch, staring at my front door once again.
My fighter flight response exploded.
Way more than the first time, I snuck my way to the front door and quietly turned the
deadbolt and handle locks.
I didn't want him to hear me.
I can see out of my blinds, but only a little
bit. He's still standing there, not moving an inch, wearing a white tank top, and probably
his boxers. I was dead focused on him. I was trying to figure out if I was going to
have to confront this man. He's never been mean or angry towards us. I have no bad things to say about him
since I understand that he's not all there, but this was too bizarre.
He had to have been standing there the entire time I was watching that movie, maybe even longer.
I walked to my room and placed a couple of shells next to my shotgun, just in
case. I call my mother's phone as I stare back out to see what he's doing, but he's not
there. I scan over the yard, but I don't see him anywhere. When she answers, I tell her
what Tango Out is doing and she hands the phone to her boyfriend. He makes sure I've got my gun ready in case he tries to get hostile. They'll be home in half an hour. I said
that's okay and hang up the phone. I pressed 911 on my ringer to be ready at a moment's
notice. And that's when I look back out the peak spot of my window and he's standing
there, staring at me. I doubt he was able to
actually see me but it made me jump back and duck below my window. I scrambled to grab
my phone that fell when I jumped. That's when the two little knocks happen on the front
door. I froze entirely. Two more little knocks follow. I separate my blinds just enough for me to see his face.
He has a simple calm expression on his face, but I can see tears pouring down his face with swollen eyes.
I was about to hit dial to 911, when from around the corner. Two officer units with flashing lights
pulled up in front of my house.
I'm still shocked.
Someone must have seen him and called the cops
before I did.
I see Tango out turn around and stare at the lights
then he casually walks over to them.
I open my blinds to see two officers,
grab him and immediately start to search and question him.
After a moment of making sure the cops had him under control,
I came out instead on my patio and stared at them.
I let a cigarette, since my nerves were all over the place,
and waited for one of the cops to walk over and talk to me.
Turns out they've had to wrangle him up
from multiple places around the neighborhood, and he's even broken into some people's garages and slept there for the night.
Just to be discovered the next morning.
They ask if I'm fine, and I say yes.
They make a couple of comments about how he was about to break into the giant's lair.
They ask me if I want to press charges, but I say no since I know he's a paranoid schizophrenic, and he's not able to control himself all the time.
It took him across the street to his mother.
My parents came back shortly after, and the night kind of ended there.
I woke up the next day to find multiple cans of food, spread all over my front yard.
Maybe it was Tango's way of saying sorry.
I rounded them up and placed them on her property and went to work. Since then we haven't had an issue with Tango's way of saying sorry. I rounded them up and placed them on her property
and went to work.
Since then, we haven't had an issue with Tango out.
I see him once in a while walking down the street.
I guess the cops are going to help his mother
get them into suitable living and him
into a hospital for the help he needs.
But he hasn't come back onto our property since that night.
I'm still a little nervous about going out to smoke though. Tango out. I can't imagine what's going on in your mind, whatever is haunting your thoughts
and dreams. I hope one day you can overcome and live happily. But until then, I hope we don't Thank you for listening to this week's episode of Let's Not Meet, a true horror podcast.
This week you have heard, when I was seven in adult neighbor tried to indoctrinate me into a cult. I read it user, Blown Radiation.
He is not your son by an anonymous listener. And finally, Tango Out. I read it
user, Seaco 4800. Don't forget to check out the Patreon at Patreon.com
forward slash Let's Not Meet Podcast for all the bonus content. I'll see you
guys next week for a brand new episode of Let's Not Meat. 18T fiber presents a straightforward moment.
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