Publication Date:May 1998 Availability:Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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ISBN13: 9780440226192
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Amazon.com Review Each hour, 75 women are raped in the United States, and every few seconds, a woman is beaten. Each day, 400 Americans suffer shooting injuries, and another 1,100 face criminals armed with guns. Author Gavin de Becker says victims of violent behavior usually feel a sense of fear before any threat or violence takes place. They may distrust the fear, or it may impel them to some action that saves their lives. A leading expert on predicting violent behavior, de Becker believes we can all learn to recognize these signals of the "universal code of violence," and use them as tools to help us survive. The book teaches how to identify the warning signals of a potential attacker and recommends strategies for dealing with the problem before it becomes life threatening. The case studies are gripping and suspenseful, and include tactics for dealing with similar situations.
People don't just "snap" and become violent, says de Becker, whose clients include federal government agencies, celebrities, police departments, and shelters for battered women. "There is a process as observable, and often as predictable, as water coming to a boil." Learning to predict violence is the cornerstone to preventing it. De Becker is a master of the psychology of violence, and his advice may save your life. --Joan Price
A Q&A with Gavin de Becker
Question: In today?s world, where terror and tragedy seem omnipresent, the fear of violence never seems more heightened. Is the world a more violent place than it ever has been?
Gavin de Becker : Your question contains much of the answer: today?s world, "where terror and tragedy seem omnipresent..." The key word is "seem." When TV news coverage presents so much on these topics, it elevates the perception of terrorism and tragedy way beyond the reality. In every major city, TV news creates forty hours of original production every day, most of it composed and presented to get our attention with fear. Hence an incident on an airplane in which a man fails to do any damage is treated as if the make-shift bomb actually exploded. It didn?t. Imagine having a near miss in your car, avoiding what would have been a serious collision--and then talking about every hour for months after the fact. Welcome to TV news.
To the second part of your question, No, the world is not a more violent place than it has ever been, however we live as if it were. The U.S. is the most powerful nation in world history--and also the most afraid.
Question: You were just on the Oprah show discussing spousal homicide--can you talk about the show, and whether spousal homicide is a growing epidemic?
Gavin de Becker: Through two shows Oprah dedicated to the topic, we?re conveying a great deal of new information, and most of all, Oprah?s announcement that a MOSAIC assessment system developed by my firm will be made available to any person who wants to use it, at no cost, via her website. This will allow anyone to diagnose a relationship to determine if it has the combination of factors most associated with escalated violence, and spousal homicide. Is spousal homicide increasing? It is not; however, the reality is more disturbing than an increase: Spousal homicide has remained a constant in our lives, such that every four hours at least one woman is killed in America by a husband or boyfriend. That uninterrupted and sad statistic can be interrupted and changed--because as explored in The Gift of Fear, spousal homicide is the single most preventable serious crime in America--largely owing to that fact that it always occurs after many warning signs, and after several people are aware of the risk.
Question: Your bestselling book The Gift of Fear gives many examples to help readers recognize what you call pre-incident indicators (PINS) of violence. What role does intuition play in recognizing these signals?
Gavin de Becker: Like every creature on earth, we have an extraordinary defense resource: We don?t have the sharpest claws and strongest jaws--but we do have the biggest brains, and intuition is the most impressive process of these brains. It might be hard to accept its importance because intuition is often described as emotional, unreasonable, or inexplicable. Husbands chide their wives about "feminine intuition" and don?t take it seriously. If intuition is used by a woman to explain some choice she made or a concern she can?t let go of, men roll their eyes and write it off. We much prefer logic, the grounded, explainable, unemotional thought process that ends in a supportable conclusion. In fact, Americans worship logic, even when it?s wrong, and deny intuition, even when it?s right. Men, of course, have their own version of intuition, not so light and inconsequential, they tell themselves, as that feminine stuff. Theirs is more viscerally named a "gut feeling," but whatever name we use, it isn?t just a feeling. It is a process more extraordinary and ultimately more logical in the natural order than the most fantastic computer calculation. It is our most complex cognitive process and, at the same time, the simplest.
Intuition connects us to the natural world and to our nature. It carries us to predictions we will later marvel at. "Somehow I knew," we will say about the chance meeting we predicted, or about the unexpected phone call from a distant friend, or the unlikely turnaround in someone?s behavior, or about the violence we steered clear of, or, too often, the violence we elected not to steer clear of. The Gift of Fear offers strategies that help us recognize the signals of intuition--and helps us avoid denial, which is the enemy of safety.
Question: Your latest book, Just 2 Seconds, has been called a "masterpiece" of analysis on the art of preventing assassination. It contains an entire compendium of attacks on protected persons across the globe. What motivated you to put together such a definitive reference? What tenets can be applied to one?s everyday life?
Gavin de Becker: Most of all, we wrote the book we needed. My co-authors and I had long looked for an extensive collection of attack summaries from which important new insights could be harvested. Unable to find it, we committed to do the work ourselves, eventually collecting more than 1400 cases to analyze. Many new insights and concepts emerged from the study, and the one most applicable to day to day life, even for people who are not living with unusual risks, is to be in the present; pre-sent, as it were. Now is the only time anything ever happens--now is where the action is. All focus on anything outside the Now (the past, memory, the future, fantasy) detracts focus from what?s actually happening in your environment. Human being have the capacity to look right at something and not see it, and in studying such a crisp event--the few seconds during which assassinations have occurred--Just 2 Seconds aims to enhance the reader?s ability to see the value of the present moment.
(Photo Avery Helm)
Product Description True fear is often a signal that can save your life. Are you listening?
The baby-sitter you've just hired makes you uneasy--what should you do?
You sense you are being followed --do you confront the stranger...or run?
A fired employee says "You'll be sorry"--should you take him seriously?
A person in the elevator you are about to enter just doesn't look right--do you wait for the next car?
A date won't take "no" for an answer. The new nanny gives a mother an uneasy feeling. A stranger in a deserted parking lot offers unsolicited help. The threat of violence surrounds us every day. But we can protect ourselves, by learning to trust--and act on--our gut instincts.
In this empowering book, Gavin de Becker, the man Oprah Winfrey calls the nation's leading expert on violent behavior, shows you how to spot even subtle signs of danger--before it's too late. Shattering the myth that most violent acts are unpredictable, de Becker, whose clients include top Hollywood stars and government agencies, offers specific ways to protect yourself and those you love, including...how to act when approached by a stranger...when you should fear someone close to you...what to do if you are being stalked...how to uncover the source of anonymous threats or phone calls...the biggest mistake you can make with a threatening person...and more. Learn to spot the danger signals others miss. It might just save your life.
erroneous?August 25, 2010 Jessa I'm puzzled by the author's assertion, in the epilogue, that only one in 150 Americans falls prey to violent crimes. Current estimates have the rape rate at one out of every three to six American women, and one out of every fourteen American men. Surely this qualifies as violent crime.
Required Reading For Every Female Over 15August 8, 2010 Barbara Bryden Hesse I was told about this book ten years ago, and I have just now gotten around to reading it. What was MY reaction to the book? I immediately bought eight copies to give to friends and family!
Written in a captivating style, Gavin de Becker gives provides practical information through anecdotes, which makes the information easier to recall once the book has been laid aside.
Women tend to get into dangerous situations when they don't listen to the tiny internal voice which warns them of danger, or because they don't want to appear "rude". For example, when waiting alone for an elevator, what happens when the elevator door opens and there's only one person in the elevator -- a man whose appearance raises the hair on the back of the neck? Fearful of appearing "rude", many women will squelch the internal voice that says to wait for the next elevator, and they'll get into that soundproof metal box with the very person their body has warned them about. Even if the person turns out to be harmless, the woman spends the entire elevator ride queasy at the thought of what might happen during those shared few minutes.
Gavin de Becker examines the question of "WHY do we do what we do?" and "WHY do OTHERS do what THEY do?" An overly solicitious stranger who refuses to take "NO" for an answer, is not being as helpful as they portend to be. In that example, de Becker emphasizes that "No" is a complet sentence. No need to elaborate or explain. "No" means "NO".
What if the person isn't a stranger? The same advice applies. De Becker says that if a jumbo jet filled with passengers crashed into a mountainside, killing all aboard, and that happened month in and month out, it still wouldn't equal the number of women killed each year by husbands and boyfriends.
This book should be required reading for every female over the age of 15, and the chapter dealing with workplace violence should be required reading for everyone who works outside the home, whether or not they manage other people.
THE GIFT OF FEAR by Gavin de Becker is an excellent book. I'm just sorry that it took me ten years to start reading it.
The Gift of Fear and Other Survival Signals that Protect Us From Violence
Criminal Justice ProfessorAugust 7, 2010 Andy Nazario(Albuquerque, NM United States) This is a very interesting as well as educational book. I use it as a reader in my criminal justice course, Crime Victims, at the university I teach at on-line in Eastern New Mexico. I am also a retired law enforcement officer of 30 years and investigated violent crime for much of that time period. I find that the book offers a unique reflection of crime victims.
Who knewJuly 29, 2010 Jay(Arizona) I had to read this book for a class. I was amazed.
Excellent points that were easy to understand and relate to.
Highly recommend reading this book.
A MUST READJuly 26, 2010 M. King This book is so full of insight. When you read each chapter you can't help but reflect back on people you've met that "gave you the creeps" or situations that made you uncomfortable and how you did or did not follow your instincts. I passed this straight on to my mother. A must read for women.