Wednesday, July 5, 2017

Smart Safety: 5 Body Language Tricks to Show You’re a Hard Target





by Steve Kardian
It can take a criminal less than seven seconds to pick you as a potential target.  By presenting yourself as a hard target, as someone difficult to compromise, the predator will move on and look elsewhere.
Studies have shown that a predator will assess the vulnerability of a potential target based on basic movements such as stride length, which includes arm swing, foot movement, and posture.  This body language will be interpreted for signs of weakness.
A predator’s main concerns are getting caught or hurt, so he is on the lookout for a person that will be easy to assault.  Protect yourself by taking the following steps to come across as a hard target.

#1) Optimal Stride

Take forceful, dynamic steps that convey assertiveness and confidence. Swing your feet gracefully forward. When you walk naturally, your arms are slightly bent at the elbows, and you let them swing back and forth. It’s natural for them to move to counterbalance your leg motion.
 
Stride Length:
A sign of weakness can be revealed when a woman takes abnormally long strides and her arms swing corresponding fashion. This can cause a woman to look uncoordinated and may attract unwanted attention from a predator.


Foot Movement:
People who shuffle or drag their feet taking short steps and displaying limited arm movement can appear uncertain or hesitant.




Posture:
Your posture tells the world a lot about you and is an easy fix. Chin up, spine straight, and shoulders back, looking around, taking in your surroundings. A slumped or hunched posture, as above, sends out a message of fear and timidity, of being less likely to fight back. Similarly, walking with your gaze lowered suggests a lack of awareness, all of which makes you an inviting target.

#2) Split-second Glance
I suggest giving people a split-second glance so that you have put them on notice that you know they are there. You are talking with your body and telling them, “I see you. If you’re up to no good I know it, and I am not an easy target.” When a predator knows that you have seen him, he may look for another target because the element of surprise is lost.

#3) Keep Your Head on the Level
If you get the feeling that you’re being watched or checked out, cast a casual glance in the direction of the person watching you. After looking at someone people have a tendency to look down or away. It signals intimidation. Once you glance at that person return your head to the forward position keeping your head on the level.

#4) Trust your Gut
As you look around, your subconscious brain will be picking up details and information and transferring that knowledge to your conscious mind as feelings or to locations on your body as physical sensations. In other words, your intuition will be actively giving you feedback.  If it picks up something unusual, you will definitely get an alert. Train yourself to hear it no matter how softly it may initially caution you.

#5) Employ Situational Awareness
Situational awareness is a notch up from simply noticing things, since it involves trying to anticipate what will occur.  For instance, if you see a man who appears under the influence of a substance, consider crossing to the other side of the street as a precaution.  You have not merely seen him but you have also taken steps to prevent a worse situation.

You have taken a critical step toward staying safe by being cognizant of the way you walk, by putting people around you on notice that you are aware of them and not scared (by maintaining your head on the level) and by trusting your gut instincts and taking precautionary steps through the use of situational awareness.  These behaviors, interpreted by predators, send a strong message that you are not vulnerable.  You are a hard target.


Steve Kardian has spent more than thirty years as a career law enforcement officer. He is a certified New York State/FBI defensive tactics instructor and an expert on the criminal mind. Kardian is the author of The New Superpower for Women and founder of Defend University, where he trains thousands of people each year on safety and self-defense, as well as strategies and tactics uniquely tailored to women's safety.

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