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Sealed Mind Set

Wednesday, March 10th, 2010 12:44 pm | by admin

Cover of
Cover of Gift of Fear

This blog is in response to the discussion that was started on Sign On San Diego after an article was published about the increase in numbers at self-defense classes in March 2010.

Due to statements of worry from women around the San Diego area who voiced to us that self-defense was not a complete solution for them due to their hectic lifestyles or their physical size, we wanted to reach out to address this concern.

http://www.signonsandiego.com/news/2010/mar/10/self-defense-class-enrollment-surges/

Many people believe that personal safety and defense information is available anywhere and that they can easily integrate it into their lives. These people are correct – you can go and purchase books on personal safety and defense and you can read those books.

The strength of the Sealed Mindset program is that we have done all of that work for you as well as integrate the knowledge together into a systematic approach to personal safety and awareness.

For example, take Gavin de Becker’s book, “The Gift of Fear.” He explains instinct and how to listen to your instinct better than anyone. Jeff Cooper, in his book, “The Principles of Personal Defense,” describes personal awareness levels through his color coded system better than anyone else. Col. Dave Grossman, in his books “On Killing” and “On Combat” explains the physiological effects of high stress situations better than anyone else. Within the book, “Secrets of Surveillance,” you are presented with a very thorough accounting of how to identify and assess a threat to your safety. Within the book, “Training at the Speed of Life,” you learn the psychological aspects of lethal force encounters. If you purchased all of these books, it would cost you more than the price of our program.

The biggest problem with purchasing and reading books is that you cannot learn how to integrate what you read about instinct with how you change your personal condition level, or how your ability to assess or interact with threats effects you physiologically or psychologically.

The other problem is that these books are typically written for professionals in language that is inaccessible to many normal individuals.

The strength of what we offer comes with the integration of all of this information into a system that was specifically designed with adult and youth education specialists to be accessible and easily retained.

What we’ve discussed is just a small portion of only the books that are necessary in someone’s search for personal safety and defense information. We have not even approached the lessons learned through 14 years of Special Operations training that civilians do not have access to.

If you still think that $249 is too much to pay for the knowledge represented by over 30 years of combined experience within antiterrorism, counterintelligence, and special operations fields, as well as the information contained in all the books below – all of which we present in an entertaining and easily accessible format online, then what we offer is not for you and that is okay.

Go to our site, check out our completely free five minute lesson and if the information you find in that lesson is something that you already know, then I believe you are well on your way to being safe.

Here are some books with prices and page numbers, all of which you would have to read to gain similar information to what you find in our course. The total number of pages you would have to read would be 3,002 pages. The total cost of just these few books is: $201.96
The cost of our course for 1 person? $97.00 for 10 hours of learning.

Gavin de Becker’s “The Gift of Fear” $11.95 (372 pages)

Jeff Cooper’s “The Principles of Personal Defense” $19.44 (250 pages)

Col. Dave Grossman’s “On Combat” $16.47 (391 pages)

Col. Dave Grossman’s “On Killing” $10.17 (366 pages)

Dick Couch’s “Down Range” $10.17 (242 pages)

“Psychology & Adult Learning” $44.80 (160 pages)

“Secrets of Surveillance” $14.85 (224 pages)

“Sharpening the Warriors Edge” $13.57 (141 pages)

“Protecting the Gift: Keeping Children & Teenagers Safe” $14.37 (325 pages)

Kenneth R. Murray’s “Training at the Speed of Life” $32.95 (337 pages)

“Beauty Bites Beast: Awakening the Warrior Within Women & Girls” $13.22 (194 pages)

The Sealed Mindset educational information covers the 99% scenario and is an integral part of any self-defense program. Combining this foundational knowledge with self-defense provides a complete solution for any individual who is willing to take a reasonable amount of time to learn.

Let’s all come together as a community to address the 99% scenarios so that a systematic approach to awareness and self-defense training can now be a complete solution for everyone.

If you are interested in learning more to keep yourself or your family safer each day, please look into “15 Seconds to Safety” for your friends and family. For more information: info@sealedmindset.com.

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Thursday, March 4th, 2010 12:38 pm | by admin

When I heard the news today about Chelsea King, my heart broke. I was in the middle of speaking to my mother about the fact that I had reached out to the King family on Facebook after being asked to do so by a classmate of Chelsea’s at Poway. This classmate was also a student of our Sealed Mindset “15 Seconds to Safety” awareness program, and she believed that our knowledge could make a difference to families and volunteers who were looking for Chelsea.

I reached out to Chelsea’s family to offer the only true value I have, which is the safety and awareness expertise compiled and developed by my husband and our team.  As I told my mother how much it meant to me that there were people in the world who recognized the value of the information to help keep our children safer, she mentioned that the police believed they had found Chelsea.

At many times in my life, and in all our lives, each one of us could have been Chelsea. I played an instrument, I jogged alone, and I excelled in school. I could have been Chelsea. For any student who did well in school and played an instrument or a sport, you could have been Chelsea. For any woman who goes jogging, you could have been Chelsea. All of us can identify with some aspect of her life because we have all been 17 with the world at our fingertips.

I am not preying on fears with this blog post. Nor am I writing these words to scare anyone. I am writing these words for two reasons: (1) to inspire action, (2) to tell you that there is a solution to our shared nagging safety fears that we haven’t been able to address yet. My husband and I have created an educational solution that is based on awareness, and we know this solution can make American families safer.

Awareness is the most important aspect of self-defense. It is the most talked about, but the least taught. We are working every day to change this: we are partnering with self-defense programs to make certain each woman who takes a self-defense workshop can receive a more complete safety solution. We are working with corporations who have proactively decided they want to offer the education to their employees. We are doing everything we can, but we need your help to spread the word and to let people know there is a knowledge-based solution out there, accessible to any family.

As Chelsea’s classmate at Poway states, “In light of what has recently happened to Chelsea, the efficacy and importance of my Sealed Mindset training has become especially obvious to me. Volunteering with the Chelsea King search efforts has reminded me of all the ways in which Sealed Mindset has changed my life and, more importantly, my behavior. Small habits, like checking around cars before I approach parking lots, have become routine. Furthermore, Sealed Mindset helped me to develop a sense of self-value: I am important. I deserve to protect myself. The wealth of practical knowledge that Sealed Mindset has provided me is invaluable, and something every parent and child should be made well aware of.”

Please reach out to us as we are here to help any community. For more information, please email anne@sealedmindset.com. To see how we teach, please take our free lesson: http://www.sealedmindset.com/

For the price of a pair of shoes, you can learn the knowledge you need to keep yourself safe. Fear is based on a lack of knowledge, and we are here to provide knowledge that your mind and heart know you seek. Please take advantage of our experiences and lessons from some of the world’s most difficult locations to bring this knowledge to your family.

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Wednesday, December 9th, 2009 4:19 pm | by admin

Bob Corker
Image via Wikipedia

Julia Corker, daughter of Tennessee Senator Bob Corker was car-jacked in downtown Washington, DC.

http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,579148,00.html?test=latestnews

According to news reports, she was stopped at an intersection when two unarmed men ripped her out of her vehicle, jumped in and drove away with her SUV.  Fortunately, she was uninjured and authorities quickly arrested her attackers.

The focus of the media coverage on this story has been the rapid police response to her phone call for help and the vehicle-tracking device that ultimately helped police to find and apprehend the two criminals.

This media reporting highlights the mindset that most people have about security.  They place the primary responsibility for their own safety in the hands of others and tend to focus on reacting after an incident has already occurred.   Ironically, this approach is not only flawed, but it is actually one of the largest reasons that criminals are able to carry out successful attacks.

This particular story has a happy ending, but the entire situation probably could have been avoided with just a little bit of situational awareness and a structured security mindset.

Yes, there was a vehicle-tracking device. Yes, there were authorities that quickly rushed to the scene. BUT, for those few terrifying minutes as she was dragged from her car by the throat and lay alone, unconscious on the street, none of that mattered.  Picture yourself or your child in Julia Corker’s shoes.  Now ask yourself these questions:

  • Would you have been able to avoid this attack if you knew how to increase your awareness, what to look for and how to evaluate people who approach you?
  • Would you have been able to react faster with the knowledge of how to prioritize your personal safety actions?
  • Would you feel better knowing how to react BEFORE an incident ever occurred?

Effective response to an attack is a good thing, but it doesn’t change the fact that an attack has already occurred.  It is much better to stop attacks from happening in the first place through a well-developed mindset that focuses on situational awareness and avoidance.

For more information, check out Sealed Mindset’s 15 Seconds to Safety course.

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