Why You Want Cops to Have a Warrior’s Mindset

Why You Want Cops to Have a Warrior’s Mindset
Police respond to an active shooter incident at Methodist Dallas Medical Center on Saturday, Oct. 22, 2022. (Liesbeth Powers/The Dallas Morning News via AP)
Ayman Kafel
Battlefields Staff
12/12/2022
Updated:
1/26/2023
0:00
Commentary

Over the past several years, the term “warrior” has been used, labeled, demonized, idolized, and applied to all kinds of professions. These days when someone mentions the word “warrior,” typically, it is synonymous with members of the military, sports figures, MMA, UFC, and others. The term “warrior” in the law enforcement community has been a taboo title. It went as far as removing the word completely from the culture and replaced with words like “guardian” and “sheepdog.”

In the law enforcement community, when the word “warrior” was used, it was referred to as a mindset. The warrior mindset. Political correctness demonized it in the profession and associated it as part of the “militarization” of police. Across the country, that word was wiped out from any curriculum at police academies. It meant that police officers were too aggressive for modern society, it meant police officers will only use lethal force, it meant police officers will think of themselves as above their fellow man.

The warrior mindset is far from that. The core beliefs of someone adopting the warrior mindset are discipline, respect, selfless service, honor, courage, and integrity.

A warrior mindset, at a deeper level, helps individuals realize the true enemy is not external forces but the internal. Weakness, fear, jealousy, greed, ego, laziness, and many other negative traits are recognized as the enemy of the warrior mindset. Japanese warrior philosopher Miyamoto Musashi once said: “If you wish to control others you must control yourself.” Think about it, Musashi did not mean literally “control” people, he was referring to the idea of the “self.” To have a warrior mindset is to look inward and defeat those negative traits in our hearts to be an effective officer in the community.

I labeled fear as part of the negative trait. Let me clarify something: To be afraid is only natural. The greatest instinct in any animal, including humans, is self-preservation. Fear of death is an overwhelmingly powerful instinct that causes an enormous amount of panic and fear. To have a warrior mindset means to fight against that fear for the betterment of your fellow man. The warrior fights that impulse to run away from an active shooter, a terrorist, a mass murderer, etc.

A police officer stops a vehicle in Middletown, N.Y., on Oct. 16, 2022. (Cara Ding/The Epoch Times)
A police officer stops a vehicle in Middletown, N.Y., on Oct. 16, 2022. (Cara Ding/The Epoch Times)

A person with a warrior mindset has two extremely powerful traits: Honor and Love. Honor in their profession and love for their fellow man. To have honor in your profession means you dedicate your life to it. Let’s be realistic for a moment. Whether being a member of the military or a first responder is a way of life. These professions are not a job. It is a way of life. A military member who dedicates his or her life to their profession demonstrates this in the way they present themselves. This is expressed in the way they shoot, fight, and care for their fellow military members.

Leaders who have that type of mentality are some of the best and strongest leaders in the military. The same goes for first responders. A police officer who looks sharp, acts sharp, and takes their profession seriously is an officer I want responding to emergencies. Not because they “look good” in a uniform but because he or she is confident in their abilities to perform the job at hand. I’m not saying they need to be perfect, but they must be there for their fellow American in times of crisis. In the end, that’s why we all raised our hands and swore the oath.

The trait of love has to do with the love of their fellow man. It is the fear of failing their fellow man. I remember responding to a “man down” call and when I got there it was a guy who suffered a heart attack. I performed CPR, used an AED, the ambulance arrived, and I did not stop until the paramedics were ready to take over. Love turns to courage, courage, to me, is when you are afraid but push on. When the Boston Marathon bombings happened, what did we all witness on TV? We saw police officers, paramedics, and civilians getting the wounded out of harm’s way. Fear was there but courage took over. That instinct to run was pushed aside for their fellow man. That is love.

Inevitably, at times, a police officer has to fight. A military member has to go to war. Fighting, to the warrior, is the last resort and everything must be tried in their power to avoid it. When someone with a warrior mindset is put in a spot where they have to act with violence, it will be done with effectiveness, ferociousness, and the fight will end quickly. Ninety-nine percent of police out there do not want to fight or even pull their firearm out of their holsters. They would rather end things peacefully. In the end, everyone gets their day in court. Unlike some other countries where the citizens of that country do not have any rights.

To have a warrior mindset is to achieve a mental strength that allows someone to take on life’s challenges through perseverance and sheer will. Is that so bad? Is that what the fear is? To have police officers have that warrior mindset? To be capable, confident, and disciplined? The officer who adopts a warrior’s mindset is not one to fear but one to be admired. That officer has compassion for their fellow man. The officer has traits like honor and love. The officer, when afraid, pushes past that to help their fellow man.

The word “warrior” should not be taboo in the law enforcement community. It should be adopted as a mindset, not as a ruthless fighter. It should be a way of life.

This article first appeared in The Havok Journal.
Ayman Kafel is the founder and owner of Hybrid Wolf Blue Line Strategies, LLC, a veteran-owned training and consulting company for law enforcement officers and agencies. He combines his military and law enforcement experience to bring much-needed cutting-edge training to the law enforcement profession. Mr. Kafel is not only an active police officer but also an Army combat veteran who was deployed during Operation Iraqi Freedom in 2005. He became a police officer in 2007 after 8 years of service in the Army. To reach Ayman, feel free to email him at [email protected].
Related Topics