Reason1--I have been following this thread from the beginning. I have not seen anywhere that you have answered my question, which has tremendous bearing on how testable your ability is.
You claim you have "experienced" your ability with people staring in a particular way; but if you have not asked them what their psycho-emotional state was when they were staring at you, how do you know what it was? Saying, "I felt it" is no evidence at all. It just adds a second claim, "I can detect the emotional state of strangers" to your original claim; and, again, you have not even checked for your own curiosity's sake to see if this assumption is true.
In order to make the extensive claims about the nature of 'staring' versus 'passive staring' that you have made, you need to provide evidence. Asking people to provide counter-examples is not providing evidence. The basic rule of rational discussion is, The onus of proof is on he who asserts the positive.* You are asserting that there are two kinds of what the dictionary and experience describes as "staring" -- where is your evidence? Further, you say a particular mental state of the starer is necessary for your ability to function; you need to document that. It is not up to the bystander to disprove your claim; it is up to you to prove it.
If you can't get that difference down, this whole discussion is pointless, as is any attempt at the MDC. You have to provide proof; the base assumption is not that you are correct.
Yours, Miss Kitt
* It is logically impossible to disprove an arbitrary assertion, for it can be supported by any number of further arbitrary assertions. Thus, "There is an invisible man standing behind you," could be amended with, "He's moving out of the way, that's why you can't touch him," and "He's levitating, that's why he has made no footprints" and so on indefinitely.