Becoming Bulletproof- Life Lessons From A Secre... Patched Link
Evy Poumpouras is not a YouTube survivalist. She is a former Special Agent for the United States Secret Service, having served on protective details for Presidents Obama, Bush, and Clinton, and having survived the 9/11 attack on the World Trade Center. In Becoming Bulletproof , she strips away the Hollywood glamour of the job and translates the tactical mindset of a bodyguard into everyday life.
Fear is a natural biological response, but it often dictates our choices in ways that limit our potential. To become bulletproof, you must change your relationship with fear. Acknowledge the feeling: Do not suppress fear; identify it. Discriminate between types: Distinguish between true danger and simple discomfort. Take measured action: Courage is acting in spite of fear, not the absence of it. Train your response: Becoming Bulletproof- Life Lessons from a Secre...
Stay in a state of relaxed awareness. Don't be paranoid, but don't be oblivious. Evy Poumpouras is not a YouTube survivalist
You don’t need a badge or a gun to be bulletproof. You need presence. You need emotional regulation. You need the courage to act despite fear and the wisdom to know what’s yours to control. Fear is a natural biological response, but it
Being "bulletproof" isn't about physical invincibility; it is about building —an internal firewall against the harmful actions of others and the paralyzing effects of fear. 1. Mastering Fear and Stress
In her Secret Service training, agents learn to perform under extreme stress—not because they’re fearless, but because they’ve trained their minds to separate sensation from action.
The first thing a Secret Service agent does when entering a room is establish a . They study how people are moving, the ambient noise level, and the general mood. Only once they know what "normal" looks like can they spot an anomaly—a person standing too still, a bag left behind, a sudden shift in tone.


