Blitz - June-July 2017

(Greg DeLong) #1
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f we can better understand
the way violent situations
develop, and our responses
to them, we can both predict
— and possibly avoid — the
point of physical altercation,
and manage the way we deal
with it; for example, control our
adrenal response, change our
position relative to our aggressor,
create time and distance, and
so on. Physical self-defence
techniques and solutions are
rarely successful unless they
are set up to work, and this
requires time — something
most aggressors will deny you,
as they want to attack from a
position of surprise. Being able to
recognise how violent incidents
occur, develop and evolve allows
you to create this time, and in
so doing, extends the ‘Timeline
of Violence’.
There are, in effect, two
timelines in any violent incident:
yours and your aggressor’s.
Imagine that a mugging is
captured on video, but the video
not only captured the incident
itself, but everything leading up
to the assault, including what
occurred in the previous hours.
You would end up watching what
happened on a split screen: there
would be the mugger’s side, and
the victim/target’s side. For a
long time the screens would be
separate, but at some point they
would merge, as both parties
end up in the same location.
The mugger would select the
victim as their target, possibly

watching them for some time
before approaching them, and
then pulling a weapon and
demanding their wallet, etc. If
the victim didn’t spot that they
were being watched, or that
somebody was approaching
them, then they will be in a state
of shock and surprise when
confronted — however, this
often isn’t the case. Warning
signs and pre-violence indicators
are often picked up on by the
person who is targeted, but are
denied or discounted. When we
understand our experience of
the Timeline of Violence, we can
begin to predict, identify, prevent
and avoid violence.
The Timeline of Violence has
five distinct phases:
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Most of the time we are in the
non-conflict phase, i.e. there is
nothing in our environment that
signals harmful intent towards
us. This should be the state we
are in most of the time. This
doesn’t necessarily mean that
we are ‘switched off ’, as we can
still be alert and aware, rather
that there is nothing we need
to investigate in regards to our
safety. Physiologically, our heart
rate should be at a normal level,
and we should be relaxed.
There are two ways that we
can enter the conflict-aware
stage, one conscious, the other

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