...and maintain situational awareness. Keep your head up and know what is going on around you.
from Layers of Response by John Farnam:
Layer One: Nonattendance. The best way to handle any potentially injurious encounter is:
Dont be there. Arrange to be somewhere else. Dont go to stupid places. Dont associate with stupid people. Dont do stupid things. This is the advice I give to all students of defensive firearms. Winning a gunfight, or any other potentially injurious encounter, is financially and emotionally burdensome. The aftermath will become your full-time job for weeks or months afterward, and you will quickly grow weary of writing checks to lawyer(s). It is, of course, better than being dead or suffering a permanently disfiguring or disabling injury, but the penalty for successfully fighting for your life is still formidable.
Crowds of any kind, particularly those with an agenda, such as political rallies, demonstrations, picket lines, etc are good examples of stupid places. Any crowd with a high collective energy level harbors potential catastrophe. To a lesser degree, bank buildings, hospital emergency rooms, airports, government buildings, and bars (particularly crowded ones) fall into the same category. All should be avoided. When they cant be avoided, we should make it a practice to spend only the minimum time necessary there and then quickly get out.
A superior gunman is best defined as one who uses his superior judgment in order to keep himself out of situations that would require the use of his superior skills.
I’ve taken to carrying a video recording device. It’s already saved me once. The DON’T want to be videographed.
Especially when waiting in line for your morning casual carpool!
.http://www.sfgate.com/crime/article/Teen-IDd-as-Oakland-carpool-robber-charged-as-4843241.php