Pressure changes breathing, attention, reaction speed, decision-making, and recovery. This section helps you train control before stress takes over.
Pressure shows up differently for every officer. Start by learning what it changes, or check where it tends to hit you first.
Train your response before you need it.
Pressure does not just affect how you feel. It changes breathing, attention, reaction speed, decision-making, and recovery often faster than you realize.
Adrenaline can improve reaction speed, but too much activation can narrow thinking, increase urgency, and reduce control
Under pressure, attention can lock onto one thing while other important information fades into the background.
Stress can make breathing faster, higher, and shallower, increasing tension and accelerating the body further.
Pressure can reduce flexibility in thinking and make decision-making feel faster and more rigid.
As activation rises, coordination and precision can decrease while larger survival responses take over.
Sometimes the call ends, but the body stays activated during the drive home, at dinner, or lying in bed afterward.
Before pressure training, build the basics. These are the core control skills that help you breathe, focus, settle your body, and steady your response under stress.
Keep your breathing from speeding up too far under pressure.
Train your body and mind to come down faster after pressure and activation.
Slow the internal pace and bring your thinking back to the next clear action.
Stress builds in the body fast. Learn how to recognize and release it before it affects your reactions.
Stress changes breathing, attention, tension, and reaction speed quickly. These scenarios are designed to help you practice staying controlled while your system is activated.
Overlapping radio traffic, urgency, incomplete information, and rising pressure.
Goal:
Maintain controlled breathing and steady attention while stimulated.
Focus Areas:
Environmental tension, uncertainty, dispatch traffic, and incomplete information.
Goal:
Slow the pace intentionally while maintaining awareness
Focus Areas:
Quiet cruiser, replaying details, body still activated after the scene ends.
Goal:
Practice decompression and transition control.
Focus Areas: