The Gift of Fear, Gavin de Becker’s 1997 book on intuition and personal safety, made a single point that hasn’t aged: most people who get hurt by strangers were trying to be polite at the moment something felt wrong. The instinct that says “this is off” arrives early. The training that says “don’t be rude” overrides it. Understanding that conflict โ and rehearsing the override โ is more useful than any self-defense class.
Social conditioning is loud, intuition is quiet
From childhood, most of us are taught that politeness is a baseline social good. We learn to smile at adults we don’t know, to accept help we didn’t ask for, to keep conversations going when they’ve become uncomfortable. These are not bad defaults for ordinary life. They become dangerous when the situation has shifted from ordinary to predatory and our brain registers the shift but our mouth keeps performing the script. De Becker calls this the “forced teaming” tactic, where a stranger uses we-language to manufacture instant rapport. The defense โ saying “no” without softening, walking away mid-sentence, refusing the help โ feels stunningly rude. That feeling is the conditioning. Predators rely on it because it works on a high enough percentage of targets to be a viable strategy.
What the research actually shows
Studies of assault survivors and convicted offenders converge on a striking pattern: offenders frequently describe selecting targets based on perceived compliance signals โ averted gaze briefly returned, slowed pace, polite verbal engagement. A 2013 paper in the Journal of Interpersonal Violence on victim selection by sexual offenders found similar cues. None of this means that being attacked is the victim’s fault; the responsibility is entirely the perpetrator’s. But it does mean that the social skills we’re praised for in childhood โ agreeableness, accommodation, smoothing over discomfort โ are exactly the skills predators read as opportunity. The countermeasures aren’t aggressive. They’re disengagement: walking the other direction, not answering the question, leaving without explanation. People consistently underestimate how socially acceptable a brisk “no thanks” actually is, and overestimate how much an unfamiliar person is owed.
Rehearsing the override
The hard part isn’t knowing what to do. It’s practicing it before you need it, because in the moment your default behavior is whatever you’ve done a thousand times. Self-defense instructors who specialize in pre-attack avoidance โ Rory Miller, Tim Larkin, and others โ emphasize verbal scripts: short, declarative, repeated. “I’m not interested.” “Please step back.” “Don’t follow me.” Saying them out loud, even in private, lowers the activation cost when it counts. So does giving yourself permission to be wrong. If you exit a situation and it turns out the person was harmless, you’ve cost yourself a minor social awkwardness. If you stay and you were right, the cost is incomparably higher. The asymmetry favors leaving.
Bottom line
Politeness is a useful social technology that can be exploited under specific conditions. The fix isn’t paranoia; it’s permission โ explicit, internal permission to act on the gut signal before your manners catch up. If your body is already moving toward the exit, trust it. The apology, if one is needed, can come later.
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