"Michael Julian has written an excellent book. Practical, detailed, and a potential life saver if you find yourself in the midst of a targeted attack."

The Psychology of Freezing: Why Good People Fail to Act in Crises and How to Fix It
When violence erupts, people like to imagine they would react decisively. They picture themselves running, fighting, helping others, or finding a strategic escape. The uncomfortable reality is that most people do not move at all. They freeze, physically and cognitively, even when they know danger is present.
This freeze response is not a character flaw. It is a survival mechanism deeply rooted in the brain. And unless it is understood, conditioned, and trained around, it becomes the difference between life and death during a critical event.
The Brain Under Threat: What Is Actually Happening
In a sudden, high-stress situation, the brain rapidly shifts from rational processing (prefrontal cortex) to instinct-driven reactions (amygdala). The three primal responses are:
Fight
Flight
Freeze
Most people assume they will fight or flee. Science says otherwise. In many civilian mass violence events, freeze is the dominant first response, often lasting precious seconds or longer.
Those seconds matter.
Why Freezing Happens More to Civilians Than Trained Professionals
Military and law enforcement are conditioned through:
Stress inoculation
Repetition
Scenario-based drills
Mental priming
After-action frameworks
Civilians have none of that, yet face violence in:
Workplaces
Schools
Houses of worship
Malls
Public events
Medical facilities
The brain does not know "I am not supposed to shut down here." It knows only stimulus and survival.
Without training, civilians rely on hope, luck, or wishful thinking. None are strategies.
The First Skill: Cognitive Permission
A major reason people freeze is the brain refuses to accept "this is really happening." Denial creates delay. Delay kills.
Giving people cognitive permission to act, before they ever face danger, dramatically shortens time-to-action. This is one of the foundational goals of modern survival training: replace denial with recognition.
Once someone accepts the situation, movement becomes possible.
The Second Skill: Pre-Decisions
In a crisis, the brain does not have the luxury of building new plans. It falls back to the last plan it rehearsed, even if only mentally. That is why survival experts stress pre-deciding:
If X happens, I move toward Y.
If escape is blocked, I shift to Z.
If confrontation is unavoidable, I commit fully.
Pre-decisions reduce hesitation and overwrite freeze responses with action pathways.
Why Awareness Alone Is Not Enough
Many organizations check their box with "situational awareness training." Awareness is essential, but it is only phase one.
Awareness without a decision framework is observational, not actionable.
Survivability increases dramatically when civilians learn:
Recognition
Mindset
Movement
Tactical decision-making
Improvised defense
Communication under stress
These are not just skills. They are confidence-building mechanisms.
Confidence kills freeze.
Rewriting the Brain With Scenario-Based Learning
You cannot lecture freeze out of someone. You must train it out.
Scenario-based, emotionally realistic learning:
Simulates pressure
Integrates decision-making
Builds automaticity
Creates psychological resilience
When the first time someone has to choose is during an actual crisis, the freeze response wins. When the brain has been there before, even in controlled conditions, the odds reverse.
Why This Matters Now
Active violence events are no longer rare. They are unpredictable, fast, and often over in minutes.
Law enforcement does incredible work, but even the fastest possible response is after the event has begun. In those opening moments, civilians are not bystanders. They are the first responders.
Training them is not a luxury. It is a responsibility.
What A.L.I.V.E. Was Built to Solve
The A.L.I.V.E. (Assess, Leave, Impede, Violence, Expose) program was designed specifically to:
Break freeze responses
Replace panic with purpose
Shorten time from recognition to action
Empower civilians with practical survivability skills
Boost confidence without inducing fear
Prepare organizations without traumatizing employees
The core objective is simple:
Turn passive targets into capable survivors.
The Takeaway
Freezing is natural. Dying because of it is not.
When people understand what their brains do under stress, and how to override it, survivability skyrockets.
Empowerment beats helplessness. Preparation beats hope. Training beats tragedy.
If your organization has not upgraded beyond awareness-only approaches, now is the time to change that. A.L.I.V.E. prepares civilians to respond decisively in the moments that matter most, and that makes all the difference. Contact us today to learn more!
Hear From An A.L.I.V.E. Student Survivor Of The Las Vegas Massacre
"As a retired 32 year law enforcement veteran, with several years of SWAT and tactical experience, I learned some different unique perspectives as it pertains to civilians dealing with active threat situations. Very good class for civilians who may have never experienced reacting to a life and death stressful situation."
- Christopher C.
A.L.I.V.E. STANDS FOR:
Assess
Assess the situation quickly
Leave
Leave the area if you can
Impede
Impede the shooter
Violence
Violence may be necessary
Expose
Expose your position carefully for safety
INDUSTRIES WE SERVE
Corporations
Government
Healthcare
Places of worship
Schools & Universities
Venues
MICHAEL JULIAN
Creator of A.L.I.V.E.
A.L.I.V.E., which stands for Assess, Leave, Impede, Violence, and Expose, was created in 2014 when Michael began teaching his Active Shooter Survival philosophy throughout the United States. His book on the subject, 10 Minutes to Live: Surviving an Active Shooter Using A.L.I.V.E. was published in 2017 and the online version of the A.L.I.V.E. Training Program was launched in 2019 and is now part of the corporate security training program for companies throughout the world.
Why A.L.I.V.E. Active Shooter
Survival Training Program?
The A.L.I.V.E. Active Shooter Survival Training Program is a comprehensive training program designed to provide individuals with the necessary skills and knowledge to survive an active shooter incident. Its emphasis on situational awareness and decision-making makes it a practical and effective approach to active shooter situations. By empowering individuals to take proactive measures to protect themselves and others, the program can help prevent tragedies and save lives.



