HE GIFT OF FEAR
SURVIVAL SIGNALS THAT PROTECT US FROM VIOLENCE
Gavin de BeckerThe author is grateful for permission to include the following previously copyrighted material:
Excerpts from Amphigorey by Edward Gorey. Copyright © by Edward Gorey. Reprinted by permission of Donadio & Ashworth, Inc.
Copyright © 1997 Gavin de Becker
New Foreword Copyright © 2010 Gavin de Becker
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any electronic or mechanical means, including information storage and retrieval systems, without written permission of
the author, except where permitted by law.To the two people who taught me the most about courage and kindness: my sisters, Chrysti and Melissa. And for my mother, and grandfather, and father.
Foreword to the Special Kindle Edition Chapter 1: In the Presence of Danger Chapter 2: The Technology of Intuition Chapter 3: The Academy of Prediction Chapter 4: Survival Signals
Chapter 5: Imperfect Strangers
Chapter 6: High-Stakes Predictions
Chapter 7: Promises to Kill (Understanding threats)
Chapter 8: Persistence, Persistence (Dealing with people who refuse to let go) Chapter 9: Occupational Hazards (Violence in the workplace)
Contents
Chapter 10: Chapter 11: Chapter 12: Chapter 13:
figures) Chapter 14: Chapter 15:
Intimate Enemies (Domestic violence)
"I Was Trying to Let Him Down Easy" (Date-stalking)
Fear of Children (Violent children)
Better to Be Wanted by the Police Than Not to Be Wanted at All (Attacks against public
Extreme Hazards The Gift of Fear
Acknowledgments
Appendix One: Signals and Predictive Strategies Appendix Two: Help-Giving Resources
Appendix Three: Gun Safety
Appendix Four: Preparing the Mind for Combat Appendix Five: Gavin de Becker & Associates Appendix Six: The Elements of Prediction
Appendix Seven: Questions For Your Child's School Recommended ReadingNote: Men of all ages and in all parts of the world are more violent than women. For this reason, the language in this book is mostly gender-specific to men. When it comes to violence, women can proudly relinquish recognition in the language, because here at least, politically correct would be statistically incorrect.
Every story in this book is true, and 90% of the names used are the actual names of the people involved. The remainder have been changed to protect privacy or safety.
GdeBForeword to the Special Kindle Edition
In 2009, when Oprah Winfrey kindly dedicated an hour-long show to commemorate the tenth anniversary of the publication of this book, my publisher rushed to get a bunch more copies into print. They put out two editions, including one with a slightly revised cover.
Taken all together, The Gift of Fear has been published in twenty-five editions, including the first hardback, several paperback versions, two audio-books, and at least fifteen foreign-language versions.
Aside from content, what they all had in common till now was bulk, weight, ink, paper, laminates, glue, and packaging at every level—from the plastic they were sealed in to the cartons they were shipped in. Every copy spent some time in the back of a truck, train, warehouse, or storeroom. Given that The Gift of Fear was a #1 National bestseller in the US and Canada, imagine how many trips to how many stores so many people made.
With this special Kindle edition, my first literary child is now freed from the bonds of the material world, so to speak, and can sail instantly, efficiently, and without waste to anywhere on earth (and soon, beyond). No more need for the reader to use a 3,000 lb car to go get a 15-ounce book.
While the paper editions of The Gift of Fear have indexes listing some notable references, this Kindle edition allows the reader to find every occurrence of any reference, name, passage, subject, topic, or even individual word—instantly.
While readers of the old editions might have occasionally benefited from having a dictionary nearby, readers of the Kindle edition can see the definition of every word at the instant it's encountered.
Appreciating these technology advances, I also observe some of the ways in which other technologies place people at greater risk than they were a decade ago. There are chapters ahead about stalking and harassment, and given the role of the Internet in our lives, perpetrators now have a wider menu of intrusive strategies than they did when this book was first published. The Internet offers greater anonymity to unwanted pursuers, and less privacy to their targets. Technology has also expanded the ways in which violent people can track down those they intend to harm, and has, at the same time, made hiding much more difficult. The chapter ahead about mass shootings at businesses includes the warning signs that precede those terrible incidents. One is the perpetrator's fascination with violent media, and technology has exponentially expanded the number and types of websites celebrating those themes. There's a chapter about school shootings, and while I referred to violent video games from which a troubled student might draw inspiration, technology in the past decade has profoundly enhanced the realness and intensity of these games.
Social networking has changed the way people come into each other's lives, and though offering women some insulation at the start of relationships, these sites also expose one's image and information to a larger population than might be wise. Through the Internet, some people have become emotionally invested in relationships with very little confirmable knowledge about the other person.