Read SAS Urban Survival Handbook Online
Authors: John Wiseman
Tags: #Health & Fitness, #Reference, #Survival, #Fiction, #Safety, #Self-Help, #Personal & Practical Guides, #General, #Survival Skills
When out alone
Plan your routes sensibly. Don’t go out for the evening without planning how you will return. Arrange to stay overnight or to travel with a friend or two. You should feel relatively free to move around as you choose—or you might as well stay at home and barricade the doors and windows!
Most common sense precautions can become automatic—a normal, necessary part of everyday life just like eating, sleeping or working:
If you see someone under threat in the street, and don’t feel able to intervene, at least call the police at the first opportunity. A group of people could use their numbers to discourage an attacker.
BEING FOLLOWED
If you think someone is following you, cross the street. See if the suspect does the same. If they do, cross back. If they show any sign of still following you, walk up to a house and fumble with your keys. If it’s occupied, ring the doorbell and ask for help. Try to get to a place where there are other people or stop at a phone and call the police. Go into a shop or, at night, a takeaway restaurant or public house. If possible, leave by another exit. It may be a good idea to stop and look in a shop window. You may be able to study the behaviour of the person, reflected in the glass. Try not to panic—don’t run unless it is to a place of definite safety nearby.
REMEMBER
Going up to a strange house and asking the occupants for help may also be dangerous – especially for a woman on her own. The owners of the house may not be friendly or may themselves be suspicious or afraid of YOU – an unexpected caller!
If someone comes to your door and says they are being followed or have been attacked, give them the benefit of any doubt. You don’t need to let them into your home—but don’t just send them away (which is common). Call the police or an ambulance.
Walking on the road side of a pathway—or even in the road—may be safer when there is no traffic. Don’t walk close to doorways and bushes where all someone has to do is grab you. Make it more difficult for them!
Try to act as if you are very confident (even if you’re terrified). Walk purposefully. Keep your hands out of your pockets—ready to use to defend yourself. Looking confident implies you can ‘take care of yourself’ and may put off an attacker. DON’T keep glancing nervously over your shoulder. DON’T hang your head and look at the ground. Keep your head UP—looking and listening at all times.
DRIVING
Being in a moving car – except from the dangers associated with using roads – makes you safer than you might be on foot. But if your car breaks down, you may become more vulnerable to attack.
Plan your journeys properly, especially through unfamiliar territory. Always have a map handy. Always make sure that your car is working properly and that you have enough petrol for the journey.
Try to let someone know where you’re going, and at what time you can expect to arrive. It would be sensible to join a major breakdown service. Try to park in busy well-lit areas.
In isolated, unfamiliar or badly-lit areas:
REMEMBER
It’s a good idea to carry a small amount of spare petrol in an approved petrol can. In hot weather, a can of water could prove invaluable.
If you see an accident or someone having trouble with their car in an isolated spot, you don’t need to stop. DON’T get out of the car. With your doors locked and a window only partially open, drive alongside and offer to phone for help as soon as you reach a telephone (or stop further on and use a car phone, if you have one). If you prefer, signal to the driver as you pass that you will call for help from the nearest public telephone.
If you are stopped
Someone may step out into the road and make it necessary for you to slow down—or stop. If you haven’t already done so, immediately lock all doors and close windows as you approach. Change to a lower gear—ready to accelerate away if there is any sign of danger. At night, use your headlights to give you a good view of whatever is happening.
If you must stop, do NOT switch off the engine. Do NOT get out of the car until you are sure there is no danger.
If you really are not sure that the emergency is genuine, drive past—swerving if necessary—and phone the police from the first telephone you can find. If the emergency WAS genuine, you have at least summoned help.
HITCH HIKING
There are dangers from both sides – for the driver and the passenger. As a general rule, hitch hiking alone – especially for a woman, especially at night – is CRAZY. Equally so is for a person alone in a car to give a lift to a total stranger. Most advice that can be given works both from the driver’s and the hitch hiker’s point of view.
Hitch hiking is rare in cities during the day except on exit roads to major destinations. Depending on how you look at life, it’s a legitimate way of getting about if you have no other choice. Unexpected passengers may prevent a driver from being lonely or falling asleep on a long journey. ALWAYS assess the risks.
REMEMBER
Use YOUR COMMON SENSE! Don’t hitch hike alone unless you really are confident you can handle any kind of physical threat. Drivers on their own should NOT pick up passengers. Hitch hiking is not legal everywhere.
When driving:
When hitch hiking
REMEMBER
In most countries the police are not very sympathetic towards women who hitch hike alone. It may be unfair, but they are considered to have taken an unnecessary risk.