Mar 27

It just sat there looking at me

A listener writes “Hi I’m not really a artist but I did try to draw A Sketch of what I seen. December 13th while I was walking down the road by McChord Air Force Base in Washington it never moved I seen it way before I got to it I thought it was cool looking I thought it was fake I was going to take a picture of it and when I got close enough it blinked scared the crap out of me made all my hair stand up.

I just kept walking scared to run It just sat there looking at me. Its head did turn with me as I walk past.

When I finally got to my destination. I started talking about it we tried to drive back. just made me look crazy because there was nothing it was sitting in foilage shrubbery about waist-high. I could only see mid-chest up I think. I couldn’t tell if it was male or female it never made a sound or moved other than blinking an slow head turn as I walked.

When I saw it blink it was right after I took a drag of a cigarette and it blinked and its eyes followed my hand back down to my side and then back up to my face. I really don’t think this thing never even looked at the phone in my left hand just looking at my cigarette and my eyes. I did try to snap pictures but I was walking and didn’t stop moving so I don’t know that anybody have showed just laughed”

6 Responses to “It just sat there looking at me”

  1. Knobby

    I spied the tree line with binoculars near my camp this past August and saw one looking at me from behind a tree. Like this person said, it didn’t move. I kept the binocular up for a good bit and it was froze in place. I dropped the binoculars for just a second, turned my head, and then looked again and it was gone. It seemed to suspect I was looking at it but dared not move.

    I didn’t have the ability to get a camera out in time. This person sounds like they could have got a camera out, but I surmise that if they had looked away to get a camera out the sasquatch would not be there when they looked back. They often freeze in place if your eyes are looking in their direction. They understand that movement makes things more detectable.

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