Panic
Situations
Talking to yourself can keep you alive
Throughout
the set of articles I have written here there is a clear message,
often repeated - you should practice, practice, practice.
Having some
confidence in the merits of the material that you have read here,
I suspect that most of you accept the premise that practice is
worthwhile because it tends to convert what is otherwise difficult
to 'doable with some facility' (meaning that as a result of
practice you will have the skill and confidence to know that you
CAN do whatever has to be done, quickly and without error.)
Further, it teaches both our muscles and our minds how to do
things in a way that requires very little thought, very little
lost time 'finding' the appropriate controls, and just how much
force is required when using those controls. In other words,
practice allows us to accomplish what must be done without the
loss of time and control that would occur should you
simultaneously have to learn how when that panic situation
presents itself to you.
So, is that
all there is to it? Are you assured that if you practice enough
you will be ready to do whatever it takes while your body fills
itself with adrenaline?
Surprisingly,
the answer is both yes and no. You will be READY (and able) to do
what must be done, but what you have not practiced is dealing with
that adrenaline. You, normally, do not place yourself in
situations where panic stops are required in order to save your
life when you practice. Indeed, when you practice you should do so
in the safest environment possible so that mistakes can be learned
from rather than put you in the morgue.
In the real
world there is a requirement that you build a bridge from the
theoretical to the actualization of your training. Let me give you
an example of what I'm trying to get at here: You are rounding a
right-hand curve and see that a vehicle is coming towards you in
the opposite lane. That vehicle looks like it might be hugging the
center line. It has your attention! Indeed, you are target fixated
on it!! What do you do about it?
You have
learned that motorcycles tend to go where you are looking. You
have experienced that phenomenon many times. You know that target
fixation can kill you, again, because your motorcycle tends to go
where you are looking. So, why are you target fixated? You know
better.
Virtually
all of your driving experience has been 'practice' in this case.
You know that unless you change the focus of your fixation away
from the threat and towards an escape route you are likely to
steer right into that oncoming vehicle. But as soon as you
realized that you were fixated on that vehicle your body started
to manufacture a ton of adrenaline and pump it into your
bloodstream. You have started a 'fight or flight' panic attack.
All you need
to do to get out of trouble is to TALK TO YOURSELF! You need to
say something like: 'I need to look where I want to go. Look
away from that truck. That direction is where I want to go. Come
on, baby, let's go that way!'
Dumb, right?
Well, it doesn't matter what words you use when talking to
yourself. What matters is that you tell yourself to do what has to
be done. That kicks in the lessons learned from all your prior
practice and the job gets done.
In the case
study found elsewhere on this site you will see an example of how
this has saved my bacon any number of times in the past. I was
driving immediately behind another rider who, as a result of
target fixation, had a catastrophic accident. I had a passenger on
my bike at the time and, among other things, I resorted to telling
myself: "Control stop this baby!" The result, a smooth
but rapid stop that avoided losing control (no locked brakes).
Plenty of adrenaline was running its course and trying to get in
the way. No time to learn how to stop quickly. Practice had
prepared me, and all I needed was that little bridge - a brief
chat with myself that insisted that I DO SOMETHING that had to be
done, NOW!
Practice is
fundamentally important, and so is dealing with the adrenaline
that tends to confuse. No need to argue with yourself. Just a
quick chat that starts the activity. Muscle memory and familiarity
gets the job done from there.
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