States of Awareness - Cooper
Color Code
CONDITION WHITE
- White is the lowest level on
the escalator. In Condition
White one is unaware, not alert,
oblivious. This state can be
characterized as "daydreaming"
or "preoccupied". People in
White tend to walk around with
their heads down, as if watching
their own feet. They do not
notice the impending danger
until it literally has them by
the throat.
You see examples of this
frequently. When was the last
time you saw someone in traffic
roll right up to a barricade or
stalled vehicle, then expect you
to stop and let them into your
lane? They're operating their
vehicle in Condition White. When
a motorist runs over a
motorcyclist and kills him, what
are the first words out of their
mouth? "I didn't see him."
They're not lying. They were so
inattentive and complacent that
they did not notice a 200-pound
man on a four hundred pound
machine right in front of them.
When this same guy runs past a
stop sign and broadsides your
car, killing your child, he will
say, "I didn't see it.".
These same guys will be the
victims of violent crime,
because the criminal targets the
inattentive, the complacent, the
lazy, the distracted, the
preoccupied. Why? Because the
criminal wants to get to him,
get what he wants from him, and
get away from him, without being
hurt or caught. Who would be the
easiest person to do that to?
Someone in Condition White. I'm
sure you've seen or read about
the Miranda card police officers
carry. From it they read off a
suspect's rights before
questioning him. Dedicated
victims carry a similar card in
their pockets. If they are still
alive when the police arrive,
they take this card out of their
pockets and read from it, as
follows:
" Geez, it all happened so fast.
He materialized right next to
me.
I never saw him.".
So, when would it be acceptable
to be in Condition White? When
in your own home, with the doors
locked, the alarm system on, and
your dog at your feet. Then, you
can turn off your mind, if you
wish, because you have
sufficient layers of protection
and warning to enable you to get
up, get your gear, and get your
head running. If you leave your
home, you leave Condition White
behind. The instant you leave
your home, you escalate one
level, to Condition Yellow.
CONDITION YELLOW
- This is a relaxed state of
general alertness, with no
specific focal point. You are
not looking for anything or
anyone in particular; you simply
have your head up and your eyes
open. You are alert and aware of
your surroundings. You are
difficult to surprise,
therefore, you are difficult to
harm. You do not expect to be
attacked today. You simply
recognize the possibility.
Here's an excellent analogy. You
are on a small naval patrol
vessel in the middle of the
Mediterranean. You are not at
war with anyone today, so you do
not expect to be attacked. You
do, however, recognize the
possibility, so you have your
radar on twenty-four hours a
day, making a continuous 360
degree sweep of the area,
looking for potential problems.
Suddenly, there is a blip on
your radar screen. You cannot
tell by looking at the small,
greenish-yellow dot on the
screen whether it is a good
thing or a bad thing, so you ask
a fighter plane to intercept the
blip and check it out. If it is
an Al Italia airliner a hundred
miles off course, the fighter
pilot will wave at it. If it's a
Libyan MIG headed toward your
boat, he will shoot it down. He
won't know whether to wave or
shoot until he first assesses
the blip as a threat. This is
exactly the same process you go
through on the ground. When you
leave home you turn on your
radar, and it continually sweeps
the area around you for
potential hazards. When
something catches your
attention, you assess it. If
it's not a threat, dismiss it.
If it is a threat, start getting
ready mentally to deal with it.
Anything or anyone in your
immediate vicinity that is
unusual, out of place, or out of
context, should be viewed as
potentially dangerous, until you
have had a chance to assess it.
Someone who looks out of place,
or someone engaged in activity
that has no obvious legitimate
purpose, should be looked over
carefully. When your mental
radar picks up on a blip, you
immediately escalate one level
on the scale, to Condition
Orange.
CONDITION ORANGE
- This is a heightened state of
alertness, with a specific focal
point. The entire difference
between Yellow and Orange is
this specific target for your
attention. Your focal point is
the person who is doing whatever
drew your attention to him. It
might be the fact that he is
wearing a field jacket in
August. It might be that he's
standing by a column in the
parking garage, instead of going
into the building, or getting in
a car and leaving. It might be
that you have been in five
stores at the mall, and saw this
same guy in every one of them.
His actions have caused you to
take note of him, so you must
assess him as a potential
threat, just as the fighter
pilot assessed the blip earlier.
How do you assess someone as a
threat? You have to take into
account the totality of the cues
available to you. His clothing,
appearance, demeanor, actions,
anything he says to you, are all
cues. The single most important
cue is body language. About 80%
of human communication is
through body language. Predators
display subtle pre-aggression
indicators, which are obvious
once you learn to look for them.
When you shift upward to Orange,
you begin to focus your
attention on this individual
that caught your eye, but do not
drop your general over-view. You
don't want to be blind-sided by
his associates. You begin to
watch him and assess his
intentions, again looking at all
of the cues available to you.
Nine times out of ten, after a
few seconds of observation, you
will be able to see an innocuous
reason for his behavior and then
dismiss him. Once you figure out
he's not a threat, dismiss him
and de-escalate right back down
to Yellow. Who is the tenth one?
He is the predator, who would
have got you if you had been
inattentive. Now that you are
aware of him, you are in far
less danger.
As you assess this individual,
and you see things that convince
you he has evil intent, you
start to play the "What if…."
game in your mind, to begin
formulating a basic plan. This
is how we get ahead of the power
curve. If he acts suddenly, we
must have at least a rudimentary
plan for dealing with him
already in place, so that we can
react swiftly enough. By saying
to yourself, "That guy looks
like he is about to stick me up,
what am I going to do about
it?", you begin the mental
preparation vital to winning the
conflict. With even a simple
plan already in place, your
physical reaction is both
assured and immediate, if the
bad guy presses his intentions.
If, after assessing him, you
believe he is an actual threat,
you then escalate to the highest
level, Condition Red.
CONDITION RED
- In Red, you are ready to
fight! You may, or may not,
actually be fighting, but you
are MENTALLY PREPARED to fight.
In many, or perhaps even most,
circumstances where you have
gone fully to Red, you will not
actually physically do anything
at all. The entire process of
escalating from Yellow, to
Orange, to Red, then
de-escalating right back down
the scale as the situation is
resolved, occurs without any
actual physical activity on your
part. The key is that you were
mentally prepared for a
conflict, and thus could
physically act if the situation
demanded.
When you believe a threat is
real, and you have escalated to
Red, you are waiting on the
Mental Trigger, which is a
specific, pre-determined action
on his part that will result in
an immediate, positive,
aggressive, defensive reaction
from you. This is how you
achieve the speed necessary to
win. By having a "pre-made
decision" already set up in your
mind, you can move physically
fast enough to deal with the
problem. Without that pre-made
decision, the precious time in
which you could have acted was
wasted on trying to decide what
to do after he starts his
attack.
The Mental Trigger will differ
depending upon the
circumstances. It could be, "If
he swings that gun in my
direction I will shoot him", for
instance. It could be, " I have
told him to stop, if he takes
one more step toward me with
that (knife/tire
iron/screwdriver) in his hand,
I'll shoot him". Whatever
trigger is selected, it is a
button that, once pushed,
results in immediate action on
your part.
Your main enemy is reaction
time. If you are not aware of
your surroundings, and fail to
see the suspicious character, he
may overwhelm you before you can
marshal an effective defense. On
the other hand, if you are
thinking to yourself, "I may
have to hurt that guy if he
doesn't wise up"; you've
probably already won that fight,
because you have a better
understanding of what is
transpiring than he does! The
best fight is over before the
loser fully understands what
just happened. If you're caught
in Condition White, you will
need five to six seconds to
realize what is happening, get
your wits together, and respond.
You simply don't have that much
time.
There are a couple of mental
tricks you can use in the early
phases of your training to
assist you in this. Remember
that one of the three problems I
mentioned earlier in this
chapter will be actually "doing
it", actually employing lethal
force when required. To help
with this, each morning when you
put your gun on, remind
yourself, "I may have to use my
gun today". This plants in your
subconscious mind (which drives
90% of your life) that there is
a reason we wear these guns-we
may actually need them to save
our lives! When you pick up on
that potential threat and
escalate to Condition Orange,
tell yourself, "I may have to
shoot him today!". Believe me,
if you have internalized that a
specific person is an actual
threat to your life, but that
you have the means to stop him
if need be, it gets easier to
mentally deal with the
situation.
Let's work through a scenario to
illustrate these principles.
Let's say you are working in a
jewelry store today, a small
storefront shop in a strip mall
in suburbia. All of the other
employees went to lunch and left
you here alone. There are not
even any customers in the store
at the moment, you're alone.
What mental state are you in?
(Yellow. You are not ensconced
in your home; you're out in the
real world.) So you keep your
head up, and occasionally you
scan out through the glass
storefront and check out the
parking lot. Since there is no
one else in the store, any
problem will have to come from
outside. You want to know about
a problem while it's out there,
not when it's standing across
the counter from you.
As you glance through the glass,
you see two men in their early
20's back up an old car to your
store, get out in identical
jogging suits, enter your door,
and split up. Immediately, you
go to Orange. They have done
nothing illegal, and nothing
aggressive, but they are out of
place, out of the ordinary, so
you escalate your mental state,
and begin to think. "This looks
like a hold-up in the making. I
may have to hurt these guys.
What should I do know? If things
go bad, I'll drop behind this
safe and I can shoot into that
wall without endangering anyone
on the parking lot. I have a
plan." At this point you watch
them, and continue to monitor
their movements. If they leave,
you de-escalate to Yellow once
they are gone.
If they stay, they will probably
get together on the far side of
the store and briefly discuss
what they have seen. They will
then move toward your position
at the counter, and after trying
to distract you (Can I see that
ring back there?) pull their
guns and announce a stick-up. If
you have been using the system,
you went from Yellow to Orange
when they came in, and went to
Red as they approach your
counter. You are ready. Because
criminals have to be adept at
reading body language (their
lives depend upon this skill),
they will see that you are
prepared and simply leave. About
nine out of ten pairs will leave
at this point, without a
confrontation. As they drive
away, de-escalate from Red, to
Orange, to Yellow.
What about the tenth pair? They
are drugged, drunk, or both, and
failed to recognize your level
of readiness. They may go ahead
foolishly with their hold-up.
According to FBI studies,
probably 80% of the ones you
will actually have to fight will
be under the influence of
drugs/alcohol/drugs and alcohol
at the time. What's the good
news? They're drunk and/or
drugged, which plays Hell with
their reflexes, reaction time,
and motor coordination. They'll
be relatively easy to deal with,
IF you are mentally prepared
(Condition Red) and have done
your homework.
If they come in, and upon
observing them you go to Orange,
then as they approach, to Red,
but then they leave, and you
de-escalate, you will have gone
all of the way up the scale
without even reaching for your
gun, which is very common. The
point is, you would have been
ready to reach for your gun if
necessary. This is how you win
fights, by being mentally
prepared to win.
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