Covert Operative Guide

Covert Operative Guide

How to Know if Someone is Trying to 'Read' You

Mind Games in Motion: Spotting Strategic Conversations

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ALIAS
Feb 13, 2025
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Every operative, whether in the field or just navigating daily life, should know when someone is trying to read them.

Being aware of others’ attempts to assess your emotions, intentions, or vulnerabilities is crucial in counter-surveillance, negotiations, and deception detection.

The ability to sense when you’re being read allows you to control information leaks, manage perceptions, and turn the tables on an adversary. People unconsciously project signals when analyzing others - your job is to spot those tells before they get what they want from you.


Sudden Shifts in Attention and Eye Contact

A person trying to read you will pay closer attention than usual, often shifting their focus rapidly between your face, hands, and body language. Their eye contact might be more intense or strategic - holding it longer than usual or breaking it abruptly when they think you’ve noticed.

Skilled readers don’t stare; they observe in bursts, checking for microexpressions and reactions to certain words or topics. Watch for this pattern. If their gaze lingers after they ask a question, they’re likely gauging your response.

Mirroring and Synchronization

People naturally mirror those they engage with, but an active observer will do it more deliberately. If someone is trying to read you, they may subtly match your posture, facial expressions, or breathing rhythm to build rapport and extract more genuine reactions.

This technique, used in interrogation and social engineering, lowers your guard. If you notice someone syncing with you too perfectly, test them - change your position abruptly or break the rhythm of conversation. If they adjust too quickly, they’re tuned into you more than they should be.

Leading Questions and Strategic Pauses

A person trying to read you won’t just listen to your words; they’ll structure conversations to draw out involuntary reactions. Leading questions, vague statements, and well-timed pauses force you to fill in the blanks, revealing more than you intend. For example, if someone says, “I bet you weren’t expecting that,” and then watches your face, they’re testing your reaction.

A skilled reader will throw out ambiguous statements to see if you correct or confirm their assumptions. When you notice this happening, stay neutral - don’t react, and don’t fill the silence.

Testing for Baseline Reactions

Operatives, interrogators, and even skilled manipulators establish a baseline before extracting real information. They might start with harmless questions to see how you normally react, then shift to more probing topics, watching for deviations in your behavior.

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