Aware 360 Pro Application

Scenario-based decisions

Aware360 Pro – Scenario-Based Decisions Module

🧠 Scenario-Based Decisions Module

Real safety comes from real decisions. This module places you inside realistic situations where awareness, behaviour reading, and distance management determine the outcome. The goal isn't to be perfect — the goal is to think faster, act earlier, and trust your instincts with confidence.

1️⃣ Why Scenario-Based Training Works

The human brain learns best through story, imagery, and emotional connection. When you place yourself inside realistic scenarios, your mind builds a “library” of responses, allowing you to react much faster in real life.

The more scenarios you explore, the stronger your instinctive reactions become.

This module contains situational stories based on real patterns seen in parks, streets, shops, public transport and everyday environments. Each scenario includes:

  • Environmental risks
  • Behavioural cues
  • Distance changes
  • Decision points
  • The safest early action

2️⃣ Scenario 1 – The Bench Watcher

Situation

You're walking through a park with clear visibility. On a bench ahead, a man sits alone. At first he seems calm, but you quickly notice:

  • His eyes lock onto individuals for too long
  • He repeatedly shifts weight like preparing to stand
  • He scans people rather than enjoying the environment
  • His hands disappear into his jacket then reappear
Your Decision Point

As you continue walking, he stands up just as you draw closer, turning slightly toward your path.

This is a deviation from normal behaviour. Early action required.

Safest Outcome:

  • Change your walking angle early
  • Move away from other people to reduce collateral risk
  • Increase distance by 6–10 metres
  • Keep him in peripheral vision while exiting the area

3️⃣ Scenario 2 – The Direction Changer

Situation

You're walking down a quiet path. A person ahead of you suddenly changes direction — not once, but three times — each time aligning with your movement.

  • No phone in hand
  • No obvious reason for the direction changes
  • Body language is stiff, head slightly lowered
  • Distance is closing unnaturally fast
Your Decision Point

The path narrows ahead. If you continue forward, you will be forced into a close-distance encounter.

When behaviour + distance + direction alignment occur together, this signals potential targeting.

Safest Outcome:

  • Stop briefly, rotate out, and change route
  • Move into wider space with clearer escape paths
  • Increase distance before they close proximity
  • Do NOT walk past narrow choke points

4️⃣ Scenario 3 – The Fixated Observer

Situation

You're sitting on the grass with your child playing in front of you. A person stands several metres away with no bag, no dog, no phone — nothing linking them to the environment.

You notice:

  • They repeatedly watch your child
  • They shift position every time you shift yours
  • They avoid eye contact with you
  • They do not engage with anything around them
Your Decision Point

Your instinct fires. Something is off.

This is NOT normal observational behaviour — it is pattern-focused attention.

Safest Outcome:

  • Call your child back immediately
  • Move away early while keeping visual awareness
  • Place obstacles between you and the individual
  • Exit the area without confrontation

🧠 Scenario-Based Decisions Quiz

10 quick scenario questions. Choose the safest action for each. If you choose incorrectly, you’ll see why that option is risky.

1️⃣ A person ahead of you stands up as you approach, turns slightly toward your path, and begins closing distance. What is the safest action?
A) Walk past them confidently without changing course.
B) Change angle early, increase distance, and move away from people to reduce harm.
C) Confront them and ask why they stood up.
D) Stop walking and wait for them to pass.
2️⃣ Someone keeps changing direction so they stay behind you on a quiet path. What should you do?
A) Carry on walking normally and ignore them.
B) Change route into a more open, populated area and increase distance.
C) Stop walking and pretend to tie your shoe.
D) Turn and angrily demand to know why they are behind you.
3️⃣ You’re sitting with your child in a park. Someone is standing alone, repeatedly watching your child but not engaging with anything else. What is the safest first step?
A) Keep watching them discreetly but stay seated in the same place.
B) Call your child back immediately and prepare to move away.
C) Walk over and ask them directly who they are watching.
D) Assume they are harmless and do nothing.
4️⃣ On a narrow path, a stranger is approaching and showing pre-contact cues (rapid breathing, rigid posture, hands hidden). What is the safest choice?
A) Continue straight and walk as close past them as possible.
B) Step off the path early into open space, increasing distance and breaking the line of approach.
C) Stop where you are and stand still.
D) Walk toward them and ask if there is a problem.
5️⃣ In a park, an agitated person begins shouting and pacing near a group of families. What is your safest decision?
A) Stay close and keep watching just in case they calm down.
B) Move yourself and anyone with you away from the area, increasing distance immediately.
C) Shout at them to stop shouting.
D) Stay at the same distance and quietly record them on your phone.
6️⃣ Someone approaches you asking for directions, but their body language feels wrong (too close, intense stare, hidden hands). What should you do?
A) Let them come closer so you can hear them properly.
B) Take a small step back, angle your body, and keep them outside your personal space while deciding if you should disengage.
C) Turn your back to them while pointing in the direction they need.
D) Tell them exactly where you live so they trust you.
7️⃣ You are walking with headphones on and notice someone suddenly very close beside you, matching your pace. What is the best decision?
A) Ignore them and keep walking with both headphones in.
B) Remove your headphones, angle away, and increase distance while becoming fully aware of your surroundings.
C) Stop moving but stay standing right next to them.
D) Shout at them to go away without moving.
8️⃣ In a car park, you see someone loitering between cars, watching people but not going to any vehicle. What is the safest choice?
A) Walk directly past them between the cars to reach your own vehicle.
B) Change route, give them a wide berth, and consider delaying your approach until they have left.
C) Approach them and ask if they are lost.
D) Stand nearby and watch what they do.
9️⃣ You’re at a park bench and someone sits extremely close despite there being plenty of space elsewhere. Their knee almost touches yours. What should you do?
A) Stay seated and hope they move away.
B) Stand up, move away to a different area, and increase distance.
C) Slide a few inches along the bench but remain there.
D) Turn toward them and start a friendly chat.
🔟 You notice two people arguing loudly ahead of you, with one becoming increasingly aggressive and waving their arms. What is the safest decision?
A) Walk straight between them to show you are not scared.
B) Change direction, move away, and avoid walking into their conflict zone.
C) Stand close and record the argument on your phone.
D) Step between them and try to break it up.