Patrick Van Horne | Left of Bang (Episode 432)

Patrick Van Horne | Left of Bang (Episode 432)

Using techniques developed by the Marines makes reading nonverbal cues to identify potential threats very straightforward.

“Somewhere between 60-90 percent of all communication is nonverbal. If you’re making a decision in the absence of 60-90 percent of everything you could gather about a situation or person, are you really making an informed judgment?” -Patrick Van Horne

The Cheat Sheet:

  • Can you determine threats by reading nonverbal cues?
  • Discover how to observe people and situations with the Baseline + Anomaly = Decision process.
  • Learn the four pillars of observable behavior and specifically the four ways to observe and assess individual people.
  • Know how to assign a person to the dominant, submissive, uncomfortable, and comfortable clusters.
  • Further master the process and trust your gut instincts about potential threats.
  • And so much more…

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It doesn’t matter if you’re in the military, on the police force, or just an average citizen walking the sidewalks of Anytown, USA; knowing how to accurately size up potentially threatening behavior in others before trouble strikes makes you and the people around you safer.

In episode 432 of The Art of Charm, we talk to Patrick Van Horne, a former Marine captain, co-author of Left of Bang: How the Marine Corps’ Combat Hunter Program Can Save Your Life, and CEO of CP Journal about how to use what he learned in his seven years of service to unmistakably identify people and situations that pose a threat to us and our loved ones by reading their nonverbal cues.

More About This Show

Prior to 2007, the US military’s strategy for dealing with insurgents in Afghanistan and Iraq was mainly reactive. The opposition had learned that the way to overcome the technological advantage of American forces was to get rid of their uniforms and blend in with the civilian population. If they could avoid detection, they reasoned, they could choose the time and place of their attacks and triumph with the element of surprise.

And it worked. For years, American Marines and soldiers could only prepare for the inevitable IED (improvised explosive device) detonations and ambushes by patrolling in greater numbers and equipping their vehicles and bodies with more armor; their goal simply became surviving an initial hit so they’d be capable of responding once the insurgents had given away their position.

It became clear to anyone paying attention that the chance for long-term success depended on tactics that went beyond waiting around to get shot at. In 2007, Marine Corps Gen. James Mattis initiated what would become the Combat Hunter program, and the basis for what Patrick Van Horne and his team now teach the general public. The idea was to switch from a strategy of reaction to proactive prevention by reading the intentions of potential troublemakers through nonverbal cues and disarming volatile scenarios before they erupted, and this is where the term “left of bang” originates.

What Does “Left of Bang” Mean?

Before the Combat Hunter program, the US military was operating with a “right of bang” mindset — that is, often quite literally, an explosive event (the bang) would happen, and the Americans would react to it. “When you are left of bang, it means that you’ve put bang onto a timeline,” says Patrick, “and you are operating earlier than [that] bang on the timeline…the goal is prevention. How can we keep it from ever happening?”

This is where we get into the four pillars of observable behavior: how we assess the environment, how we assess the collective, how we assess groups, and how we assess individuals.

Instead of giving us a hypothetical wartime scenario as an example, Patrick lays out a situation that’s at least somewhat familiar to anyone in modern America: walking into a Starbucks.

Baseline + Anomaly = Decision

First, you want to establish the baseline. What’s considered “normal” for the environment you’re entering?

When you walk through the front door of a Starbucks, one of the first things you intuitively observe is the noise level. Is it confrontational or conversational? Then you move on to visual cues. Is the place clean or dirty? Is it orderly or disorderly? Under normal circumstances, you can generally count on the noise level in a Starbucks being conversational, and the customer area is usually clean and orderly. The area has a sense of safety, so our collective mood assessment is that people are going to feel comfortable here.

This is a habitual area; anyone can come and go. There’s no one controlling access at the front door. Inside, there’s an anchor point: the counter. From their positions around this anchor point, we can make some general assumptions about people and their relationship with the store. Employees and vendors can generally be found behind it, and customers are found in front.

Now we can take a look at groups of people in line to determine if they’re strangers or if they came together. Then, we move on to more closely examine individuals to see how they fit into the baseline of a comfortable environment that we’ve already established. Are they here for the same reasons as everyone else — to get a cup of coffee, food, or free Wi-Fi — or are they an anomaly that poses a potential threat?

This is when we start to assign people to one of four clusters: dominant, submissive, uncomfortable, or comfortable.

Assigning Clusters

A cluster is just a collection of three or more observable indicators that lead to the same conclusion. For example, someone crossing their arms might be one indicator, but it’s just a piece of the puzzle — you need to match it up with other indicators to get a more complete and accurate picture of what an individual may or may not be up to. We “don’t really want to rely too heavily on a single posture or gesture or expression,” says Patrick, because “we run a pretty good risk of being completely wrong in our assessment.”

As you piece together someone’s indicators, you can start assigning them to one of these four clusters:

Dominant
This is where we put people who are trying to control a situation or make themselves look larger. Think about the posture of someone who is about to get into a fight: their feet might be spread a bit wider than shoulder width, or they’ve got an angry expression on their face, or they’re gesturing aggressively toward someone.

Submissive
The exact opposite of the dominant cluster, this is where we put someone who is using their body language to make themselves look smaller or avoid confrontation. Examples: rolled shoulders, feet tucked underneath a chair, head drooped, or hands in the lap.

Uncomfortable
This is where we put people who appear nervous, anxious or shifty — trying to distance themselves from the situation. Examples: shoulders raised, chin tucked, arms crossed, rubbing the back of the neck, or touching the nose incessantly.

Comfortable
Unlike the other three clusters, this is where we put people who are clearly unstressed about their current situation. They don’t perceive any threats around them, and aren’t giving off any clear indicators that would implicate them as being a threat, themselves.

“From gestures and postures to heartbeat to sweating,” says Patrick, “everything our body does is just executing a command that our brain gives…We are naturally lazy, so as soon as our brain makes [a] decision (e.g., “I need to fight this person” or “I need to get out of here,” or “I need to attack this person”) our body will naturally start preparing for that even if it’s still a few seconds or a few minutes away…It’s those cues — a person shifting from comfortable to dominant or comfortable to uncomfortable…[that] will help an alert observer realize there’s something going on that requires investigation. I’m not going to take my eyes off this person until we figure out why they are responding to the situation in this way.”

The Take Away

As Ben Franklin once said, “An ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure.” In the same way, staying “left of bang” — predicting avoidable bad situations and putting a stop to them before they can happen — is a far better strategy than reacting to their aftermath.

Knowing how to read nonverbal communication is a big part of this strategy, and you can learn more about how the Marines do it in this episode of The Art of Charm and by checking out Patrick Van Horne’s links in the resources below,

THANKS, PATRICK VAN HORNE!

Resources from this episode:

The CP Journal
The CP Journal Courses
Left of Bang by Patrick Van Horne and Jason A. Riley
The Art of Charm bootcamps

You’ll also like:

-The Art of Charm Toolbox
-Best of The Art of Charm Podcast

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