Sheep No More the Art of Awareness and Attack Survival Book Review

Sheep No More: The Art of Awareness and Assail Survival
by Jonathan R. Gilliam
Post Loma Press


"Despite what some security 'experts' may say, fright is not a gift."

Former Navy SEAL and FBI Special Agent Jonathan T. Gilliam takes a decidedly philosophical approach to self-defense: Each of us are potential targets of crime and violence to various degrees depending on our experience, educational activity, and exposure. Throughout the book, Gilliam reverses the perspective to that of the aggressor—admitting armed forces, criminal, mass murderer, or terrorist—and then that nosotros improve understand how potential targets are formed and how we go the target.

Some of this is common sense, such every bit targets are selected to minimize the attacker'due south exposure and maximize results. For instance, military operations often strike earlier dawn in enemy strongholds, a mass murderer selects a crowded venue with weak security, and a criminal, if not emotionally driven, identifies a singular target in the most secluded surface area. All attackers do surveillance prior to hitting, and they have a goal in mind. Even an emotionally driven attacker allows a few seconds to convince himself that he can hurt his target, identifying how and where he will strike.

Much of what an aggressor does is size up potential vulnerabilities. He's identifying a target and looking for a way in. All too often, we make ourselves vulnerable through ignorance and self-approbation. Sure, we might know of danger, but either don't know where to expect or even look at all. While the safest method is to abscond from problem, including the choice to avoid trouble areas in accelerate, this is not e'er a realistic approach in today's earth.

To better protect yourself, Gilliam suggests that you assess yourself every bit a target. Separate your life into sectors and then sub-sectors based on routine and activities. Within each sector are critical assets, critical areas, and critical times. Using comprehensive sector identification, critical areas of vulnerability will emerge along with potential avenues of approach for attackers. He finishes off this evaluation with a target equation that helps mensurate who, why, where, how, and when an attack will occur. If done thoroughly, it won't but exist one type of attacker identified. This assay can be applied to every sector/locale within your life.

Knowing your areas of vulnerability will help you close avenues of arroyo, but yous'll never be able to eliminate them all. Eventually y'all'll have to presume a defender's mindset or what to do when an attack is underway. Here, pre-planning inspires a mindset that ultimately becomes instinctive, as opposed to making up a programme in the moment which is virtually useless.

Much of what Gilliam purports is developing the addiction of situational sensation, especially in highly vulnerable areas such equally moving freely through unfamiliar areas or pausing inside contained public areas, but even familiar situations and places go vulnerable based on the bachelor avenues of approach and the fourth dimension of solar day. For example, dissimilar types of habitation-related criminals strike the target at different times of day. Gilliam stresses a salubrious dose of "what-if," which inspires confidence and wards off fear.

The author uses many examples, both famous and personal to reinforce his dual-recollect approach (i.e. imagining the attacker and planning a defense against vulnerable targets). This method is at the core of his call for self-defense through awareness, which will help you evade an attack if yous haven't first avoided it through planning. As Gilliam says, freezing up or panicking during an attack, which is exactly what the overwhelming majority volition do because they accept no program, may in fact seal your fate. At the very least, fear reduces your options and their effectiveness.

Gilliam's overall approach to cocky-defense is built from years in the war machine and law enforcement and tempered by the reality of current events. His multifaceted experience brings unique insight, cutting past the charlatans. Most of u.s.a. are never going to be Zen masters of self-defense force, merely nosotros can increase our odds considerably by following Gilliam's suggestions. He reminds us that as individuals we can keep walking nigh the planet either remaining paranoid of potential events (ignorance), naively hoping for the all-time event (complacency), or becoming educated about the sources and methods of potential attackers (sensation) and thereby increasing our odds of success and/or avoiding trouble altogether.

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