
Mindset & Situational Awareness
Smart choices prevent fights. This lesson gives you a practical awareness model, simple de-escalation tools,
and a civilian use-of-force overview so you can avoid problems — and make lawful, ethical decisions if danger finds you.
🧠 Why Mindset Matters
- You won’t “rise” to the occasion — you’ll fall to your level of training and habits.
- Avoidance beats performance: the best win is not being there.
- Decide ahead of time: your priority is escape, not ego. Winning an argument isn’t worth losing your freedom or safety.
①–④ Awareness Levels (Civilian-Friendly)
Use these as behavior goals, not fear states. Most days live in Yellow.
- ① White: Unaware/inattentive. OK at home with doors locked; not in public.
- ② Yellow: Relaxed awareness. Head up, hands free, light scan, notice exits/people.
- ③ Orange: Specific concern identified (“That guy is closing fast”). Make a plan: change path, add distance, put a barrier between.
- ④ Red: Imminent threat. Act on your plan — move, verbalize, escape, or if unavoidable, defend within the law.
👀 Pre-Assault Indicators (What to Watch For)
- Target glances (looking around for witnesses) or hidden hands.
- Grooming behavior (touching waistband/pocket) or blading the body to you.
- Rapid closing distance / intercepting your path; sudden angle changes.
- Verbal “rituals”: forced engagement, insults, demands for the time/light/phone.
② Managing Unknown Contacts (MUC)
- Posture: Hands up at chest height (non-threat), bladed stance, weight athletic.
- Space: Keep two arm-lengths minimum; step to maintain it, don’t retreat in a straight line forever.
- Voice: Calm, firm boundary: “Sorry, can’t help. Please stay back.” Repeat once, louder.
- Movement: Angle off; put a barrier (car, counter, bench) between you and them.
🗣️ De-Escalation & Disengagement
- Lower your tone, slow your cadence, keep commands short (“Back up. Stop.”).
- Apologize/exit even when “right” — your goal is leaving safely.
- Use environment: lighting, doors, staff, crowds. Ask for help early.
- Call 911 when needed; be the first good narrator of events.
📊 Use-of-Force Overview (Typical Civilian Model)
- Presence → may deter.
- Verbal commands → clear, firm instructions.
- Empty-hand control → breaking contact, shielding, non-lethal intervention.
- Less-lethal options where lawful (e.g., spray).
- Deadly force → only when you face an immediate threat of death or great bodily harm.
Legal reminder: Outside the home you generally must avoid being the aggressor; deadly force requires an
imminent, credible, and unavoidable threat. Know your state’s statutes and local rules.
imminent, credible, and unavoidable threat. Know your state’s statutes and local rules.
🏠 / 🚗 Practical Habits (Home & Public)
- Park in lit, active areas; head up on approach/departure; keys ready.
- Carry phone with voice-only earbuds or none; eyes up, not glued to screens.
- Stage a small flashlight; light lets you identify before you act.
- At home: lock/alarms, known safe-room, family call-out plan, medical kit accessible.
③ Decision Checks Under Stress
- Avoid? Can I leave right now with my people?
- Distance? Can I add steps/angles/barriers to break the problem?
- Call help? Can I get staff/911 on the way early?
- If force is unavoidable: Do they have ability, opportunity, intent, and is it imminent? Do I have a safe backstop?
✅ Quick Knowledge Check
- Describe the difference between Yellow and Orange in one sentence.
- List three pre-assault indicators you might see in a parking lot.
- Give your short, firm boundary phrase for an unknown contact.
Coach’s note: Mindset is a habit. Practice the words, posture, and movement at home so they’re ready when you need them.