: The respect you seek from others must begin with your own self-worth.
The first thing a Secret Service agent learns is situational awareness. On a protection detail, you don’t stare at the principal (the person being protected). You scan the crowd, the rooftops, the hands, the exits. You look for anomalies, not threats. An anomaly is anything that doesn’t belong—a man in a heavy coat on a summer day, a person staring too intently, a sudden parting of a crowd. Becoming Bulletproof- Life Lessons from a Secre...
The Secret Service operates on a singular, sacred principle: The mission is bigger than the individual. Agents will literally place their bodies between a bullet and the President. This isn't just about bravery; it is about purpose. When you serve something greater than yourself, fear becomes irrelevant. : The respect you seek from others must
Becoming Bulletproof: Life Lessons from a Secret Service Agent You scan the crowd, the rooftops, the hands, the exits
Instead of resisting fear, lean into it. If you are terrified of public speaking, don't try to "calm down." Reframe the physical symptoms (racing heart, sweaty palms) as signs that your body is preparing for a high-stakes performance. Ask: "What is the worst that can happen? And can I survive that?" Usually, the answer is yes. A bulletproof person does not live without fear; they live through it.
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