To stay cool is to be cool

The first person at every scene you must control is you

April 01, 2021 08:52 AM •

Police at scene GettyImages-1199109829.jpg

This article is being updated with suggestions from Police1 readers. Make sure to keep reading for more suggestions on staying cool and submit your thoughts at the end of the article.

Letting someone “get under your skin” usually results from being under-prepared for the moment and can lead to an over-reaction. Make no mistake about it, there is nothing wrong with a proper reaction, which may mean making a legal, well-performed arrest. However, an overreaction serves no good purpose. Here are few tips on how not to lose your cool and prevent an overreaction. Share your suggestions in the box below.

1. Remember, a reaction is what they want

If you lose your temper and over-react, that is for them like winning the lottery. Don’t give them what they want. Stay cool.

2. You have response-ability

No matter what the stimulus is, you have the ability to respond to it any way you want. Prepare yourself through training and honest post-call self-debriefs to improve your ability to defensibly respond to every stimulus as your career progresses.

3. Control yourself first

To be effective at every scene, the first person you must control is you. Your ability to stay calm and react effectively in the midst of chaos is what makes you a pro.

4. Know how to effectively and legally control others

By training to be able to physically lay hands on someone and control them instantly when you have legal justification to do so, even if they do not want to be controlled, gives you valuable confidence during all contacts. In short, when you are able to effectively react, chances are you will not overreact.

5. Know and control your triggers

Identify words and sentences you are hypersensitive to before they are hurled at you. After identifying your vulnerabilities in advance, put a safety on those trigger words. Say to yourself, I will never let that cause me to overreact when I hear it because I am a professional and an over-reaction is what the suspect is after.

6. Realize nothing is personal

Nothing they say is personal, so don’t take it personally. Obnoxious people are yelling at the uniform. The uniform has heard it all and the uniform can take it. Can you?

7. You are not absorbing insults, you are gathering evidence

Possess a clear understanding of what constitutes grounds for an arrest in your jurisdiction when you combine what is said and the conditions in which it is said. Armed with this knowledge, you are no longer absorbing insults, you are gathering evidence. Remember, what was said, who said it and what the circumstances were in the environment that made what was said a violation. After you make a legal arrest, document it all in your report.

8. Maintain a tactically sound position and train extensively

You can prevent an overreaction by having the backup you need and by using sound tactics.

9. Train in making calm team arrests

The positive advantage of making team arrests while being calm and looking calm is that it impacts positively on the crowd watching, the media reporting and the jury if the suspect takes the case to court. You can look like the good guys and gals while you are using force to overcome resistance if you train to approach, arrest and control as a team. Two highly trained officers can effect an arrest more smoothly than 10 poorly trained officers working as individuals.

10. Train in officer override: “They are calling you on the radio”

A signal should be worked out in advance for when a cover officer sees that the suspect is getting under the skin of the contact officer and an overreaction may be imminent. The cover officer says, “Partner, they are calling you on the radio.” Hearing this, as pre-trained the contact officer should step aside and let the cover officer take over the contact.

11. Specifically train to withstand and prevent an overreaction to agitation

In training, split into teams. One team is the police line, and the second team is assigned to insult them with commonly used (pre-arranged) taunts and chants. After each break in the action identify which person(s) in the simulated crowd took a leadership role and was worthy of arrest. Discuss how it would have been best to tactically effect each arrest and even physically walk through these arrests. Then switch. The biggest benefit to this exercise is it inoculates officers against those words and prepares them to remain calm and professional in the face of verbal taunts.

12. Use the overreacting officer demonstration-discussion

Have actors following a script role-playing as contact officer, cover officer and a suspect during which the contact deteriorates to the point that the contact officer overreacts physically (this should be specifically scripted and rehearsed to avoid injuries). When this happens, the cover officer intervenes to stop the over-reacting officer (this intervention is also scripted and rehearsed). At this point, stop the demonstration and discuss:

I would like to end by sharing words I have never forgotten from my time on the street: “The man who angers you conquers you.”

It was true then and even truer now. To stay cool is to be cool.

P.S. Here’s a new remix of an old poem you have all heard since you were young adapted for our profession.

The Sticks and Stones Remix

When they call you a “gas-hole,”

Remember, you’re the real pro.

Bullets and knives will take lives

And sticks and stones will break bones

But remember, your job is like no other

Words can’t hurt you or your mother!

If you get mad, it will make them glad

And when they sue and win, you’ll be sad.

Make ’em look like a fool, just keep your cool.

And when you’re on the street, you will rule.

Police1 readers and LinkedIn Group members respond

What advice do you have for keeping your cool? Share your suggestions in the box below.

Lt. Dan Marcou is an internationally-recognized police trainer who was a highly-decorated police officer with 33 years of full-time law enforcement experience. Marcou’s awards include Police Officer of the Year, SWAT Officer of the Year, Humanitarian of the Year and Domestic Violence Officer of the Year. Additional awards Lt. Marcou received were 15 departmental citations (his department’s highest award), two Chief’s Superior Achievement Awards and the Distinguished Service Medal for his response to an active shooter.

Upon retiring, Lt. Marcou began writing. He is the co-author of “ Street Survival II, Tactics for Deadly Encounters. ” His novels, “ The Calling, the Making of a Veteran Cop ,” “ SWAT, Blue Knights in Black Armor ,” “ Nobody’s Heroes ” and “ Destiny of Heroes ,” as well as two non-fiction books, “ Law Dogs, Great Cops in American History ” and “ If I Knew Then: Life Lessons From Cops on the Street .” All of Lt. Marcou’s books are all available at Amazon . Dan is a member of the Police1 Editorial Advisory Board.