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Your mission as a soldier in a survival situation is to stay alive.
As you can see, you are going to experience an assortment of thoughts and emotions.
These can work for you, or they can work to your downfall. Fear, anxiety, anger,
frustration, guilt, depression, and loneliness are all possible reactions to
the many stresses common to survival. These reactions, when controlled in a
healthy way, help to increase a soldier's likelihood of surviving. They prompt
the soldier to pay more attention in training, to fight back when scared, to
take actions that ensure sustenance and security, to keep faith with his fellow
soldiers, and to strive against large odds. When the survivor cannot control
these reactions in a healthy way, they can bring him to a standstill. Instead
of rallying his internal resources, the soldier listens to his internal fears.
This soldier experiences psychological defeat long before he physically succumbs.
Remember, survival is natural to everyone; being unexpectedly thrust into the
life and death struggle of survival is not. Don't be afraid of your "natural
reactions to this unnatural situation." Prepare yourself to rule over these
reactions so they serve your ultimate interest--staying alive with the honor
and dignity associated with being an American soldier.
It involves preparation to ensure that your reactions in a survival setting
are productive, not destructive. The challenge of survival has produced countless
examples of heroism, courage, and self-sacrifice. These are the qualities it
can bring out in you if you have prepared yourself. Below are a few tips to
help prepare yourself psychologically for survival. Through studying this manual
and attending survival training you can develop the survival attitude.
Know Yourself
Through training, family, and friends take the time to discover
who you are on the inside. Strengthen your stronger qualities and develop the
areas that you know are necessary to survive.
Anticipate Fears
Don't pretend that you will have no fears. Begin thinking about
what would frighten you the most if forced to survive alone. Train in those
areas of concern to you. The goal is not to eliminate the fear, but to build
confidence in your ability to function despite your fears.
Be Realistic
Don't be afraid to make an honest appraisal of situations. See
circumstances as they are, not as you want them to be. Keep your hopes and expectations
within the estimate of the situation. When you go into a survival setting with
unrealistic expectations, you may be laying the groundwork for bitter disappointment.
Follow the adage, "Hope for the best, prepare for the worst." It is
much easier to adjust to pleasant surprises about one's unexpected good fortunes
than to be upset by one's unexpected harsh circumstances.
Adopt a Positive Attitude
Learn to see the potential good in everything. Looking for the
good not only boosts morale, it also is excellent for exercising your imagination
and creativity.
Remind Yourself What Is at Stake
Remember, failure to prepare yourself psychologically to cope
with survival leads to reactions such as depression, carelessness, inattention,
loss of confidence, poor decision-making, and giving up before the body gives
in. At stake is your life and the lives of others who are depending on you to
do your share.
Train
Through military training and life experiences, begin today to
prepare yourself to cope with the rigors of survival. Demonstrating your skills
in training will give you the confidence to call upon them should the need arise.
Remember, the more realistic the training, the less overwhelming an actual survival
setting will be.
Learn Stress Management Techniques
People under stress have a potential to panic if they are not
well-trained and not prepared psychologically to face whatever the circumstances
may be. While we often cannot control the survival circumstances in which we
find ourselves, it is within our ability to control our response to those circumstances.
Learning stress management techniques can enhance significantly your capability
to remain calm and focused as you work to keep yourself and others alive. A
few good techniques to develop include relaxation skills, time management skills,
assertiveness skills, and cognitive restructuring skills (the ability to control
how you view a situation).
Remember, "the will to survive" can also be considered to be "the
refusal to give up.
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