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    The Survivors Club: The Secrets and Science that Could Save Your Life

    The Survivors Club: The Secrets and Science that Could Save Your Life

    3.7 138

    by Ben Sherwood


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    $11.99

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      ISBN-13: 9780446543910
    • Publisher: Grand Central Publishing
    • Publication date: 01/26/2009
    • Sold by: Hachette Digital, Inc.
    • Format: eBook
    • Sales rank: 259,639
    • File size: 824 KB

    Ben Sherwood is a bestselling author, an award-winning journalist, and the president of ABC News. His novel The Man Who Ate the 747 has been published in 13 languages, and his other novel, The Death and Life of Charlie St. Cloud, was made into a feature film starring Zac Efron. A former broadcast producer for NBC Nightly News, he joined Good Morning America in April 2004 as executive producer and stayed in that position until Fall 06. He lives with his wife and sons in New York City.

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    The Survivors Club

    The Secrets and Science that Could Save Your Life



    By Ben Sherwood
    Grand Central Publishing
    Copyright © 2009

    Ben Sherwood
    All right reserved.



    ISBN: 978-0-446-58024-3



    Introduction The Survivors Club

    The field is known as "human factors in survival." Translation: Why do some people live and others die? How do certain people make it through the most difficult trials while others don't? Why do a few stay calm and collected under extreme pressure when others panic and unravel? How do some bounce back from adversity while others collapse and surrender?

    This book answers those questions. It shares the true stories of regular people who have been profoundly tested by life-men and women who have been beaten down, sometimes literally flattened. It explores how ordinary folks somehow manage to pick themselves up, again and again, in the face of overwhelming odds. It investigates whether survivors are different from you and me. And it dissects the mind-set and habits that are shared by the most effective survivors. In short, it unlocks the secrets of who lives and who dies and shows how you can improve your chances in virtually any crisis. At the outset, I'd like to put a few things on the table. Almost everyone I know has faced-or is coping with-some kind of serious challenge or adversity. I wrote this book for them and for myself. While I certainly haven't been tested like the survivors in these pages, I've hit some bumps and experienced my share of loss and grief. My father was in excellent health when he died suddenly at age sixty-four from a massive and inexplicable brain bleed. Defying the probabilities, my mother has beaten back ovarian cancer for nine years, always deflecting credit to the aggressive treatment orchestrated by her superb oncologist. As a journalist, I've had a few close scrapes and witnessed plenty of tragedy. In August 1992, while covering the bloody siege of Sarajevo for ABC News, I was sitting shoulder-to-shoulder with a veteran producer and friend named David Kaplan when he was fatally wounded by a sniper. A nine-millimeter bullet ripped through the back door of our Volks-wagen van, pierced David's back, and severed his pulmonary artery. French combat surgeons fought to save him, but his injuries were too grave. It was pure chance that he-not I-ended up in that fatal middle seat, which had seemed the safest spot, away from the windows. I've always been something of a control freak, so each of these events called everything into question. Why do healthy people drop dead without reason? How can cancer strike those who aren't at risk? Why do bullets find one victim and not another? Perhaps in an attempt to regain some command, I began to ask: Are there any hidden ways to improve the odds? If "no one here gets out alive," as Jim Morrison sings, what are the tricks of sticking around as long as possible? My search produced this book, and the answers are both humbling and comforting. When it comes to survival, as you'll see, there's a whole lot that you can't control, and a surprising amount that you can. A few other disclaimers: I'm not a survivalist or an outdoors-man. I don't stockpile canned goods and I'm not preparing for Armageddon, although I did buy emergency kits for my car and home while researching this book. I'm a city guy, a journalist, and an occasional novelist. I've spent most of my life asking questions and I've always been drawn to stories of people under pressure. I remember the summer at age ten when I began to read Alive, the astonishing saga of a plane crash in the Andes Mountains and the passengers who endured seventy-two freezing days on a glacier. It's human nature to speculate: What would I have done? Would I have pushed myself to the same extremes? In March 2000, while working for NBC Nightly News, I marveled at images of Sofia Xerindza, a woman in Mozambique who escaped the deadly floodwaters of the Limpopo River by climbing into a tree, where she gave birth to a baby girl. At ABC's Good Morning America, where I worked as executive producer for two and a half years, I watched a veritable parade of survivors on the screen and always wondered: How did these people endure their trials? Were they always so strong and resilient, or did these abilities suddenly materialize when they most needed them? Television interviews last only a few minutes, so what would these survivors say if the clock wasn't ticking? How did they really get through it? In quieter moments, what wisdom might they share about their experiences? I also wanted to know about all the people who face life's everyday challenges without any attention or fanfare, the unheralded folks fighting illnesses like cancer, Alzheimer's, and Parkinson's. In the face of life's inevitable crises, how do they get through their days? Where do they find the fortitude, sometimes literally, to climb out of bed? And selfishly, how could I get some of their strength? In this book you'll meet survivors of every imaginable ordeal, young and old, rich and poor, the guy down the street and people in the news. I've gathered tales on every continent; if you can conceive of a crisis, I've probably interviewed someone who has gone through it and come out on the other side. A woman doused with gasoline and set on fire by her husband; a bicyclist on a morning ride crushed by a twenty-one-ton truck; veterans who lived through the Japanese sneak attack on Pearl Harbor and survived the great battles of World War II; a young ballerina forced to dance for her life by Dr. Josef Mengele in Auschwitz.

    The Survivors Club will explain how they did it. You'll learn some of the secrets of survival-like the safest seat on an airplane, the best place to suffer a heart attack, and how the number 3 could keep you alive in a crunch. You'll discover how some people are born with a Resilience Gene that actually protects them from the worst knocks in life. You'll find out how a few easy changes in your food and vitamins can boost your ability to bounce back from hardship. In Manitoba, Canada, you'll meet the human Popsicle: a professor who has dunked himself in ice thirty-nine times in order to understand freezing to death. In Boston, Massachusetts, you'll sit down with the Harvard Medical School expert who specializes in cases of people who are literally scared to death. And in England, a magician-turned-psychology-professor will welcome you to Luck School and show you how to increase your good fortune by 40 percent. Perhaps most surprising of all, in Charlotte, North Carolina, you'll discover the emerging field of posttraumatic growth and the remarkable theory that more people benefit from life's worst events than are shattered by them. The two questions at the heart of this book are these: (1) What does it really take to survive? And (2) What kind of survivor are you? The answers will unfold in two sections. In part 1, I'll investigate the keys to survival in everyday crises ranging from car wrecks to violent crimes. I'll take you inside one of the country's top hospitals to explore who lives and dies in emergency rooms and why, for instance, the ideal age for a brain injury is around sixteen. I'll delve into the psychology of survival and what specific personality traits give you the greatest advantage in beating the odds. I'll explore whether the will to live makes a difference in defeating diseases like breast cancer. And I'll take you on a pilgrimage to a little chapel in the Sangre de Cristo Mountains of northern New Mexico where they believe that miracle cures really happen. At every step, you'll encounter the wisdom of men and women who have fallen into the abyss and somehow climbed out. These survivors want to share the tactics and strategies they wish they had known before their ordeals. In the race to survive, their insights may give you a critical head start. At the end of each chapter, I'll also try to unlock some of the mysteries of survival. For instance, how can a 145-pound grandmother lift a 3,450-pound Chevy Impala off her son? How did a French woman who smoked cigarettes and ate chocolate every day manage to survive to the age of 122? Why do right-handers live longer than lefties? Why are birthdays and holidays especially dangerous to your survival? And what can we learn from a five-thousand-year-old pine tree named Methuselah, perhaps the oldest living thing on earth? Part 2 of this book shifts the focus to you. Are you as resilient as Trisha Meili, the Central Park Jogger raped, beaten, and left in a pool of blood? Are you as tenacious and tough as John McCain, tortured as a POW for five and a half years in Vietnam? Are you even remotely as competitive as cycling champ and cancer survivor Lance Armstrong? Are you as optimistic as Michael J. Fox, afflicted with Parkinson's disease since 1991? Working with a group of top psychologists and experts, I've developed a powerful new Internet tool to help you figure out your survivor personality. Analyzing the traits of more than one million people, my team has identified the five main types of survivors and the twelve most critical survival tools. With our exclusive test, you'll be able to find out your Survivor IQ. It will only take a few minutes, and when you're done, you'll get a customized report spelling out your unique survivor strengths. At any point, you can skip ahead to part 2 on page 293 and learn how to take the test. The Profiler will also produce your Survivor Match, which compares your personality with the men and women you're reading about in these pages. The readiness is all, Hamlet says, and I sincerely believe the Profiler can give you an edge when adversity strikes. The blast of water up my nose scrambles everything. I'm strapped upside down and can't see a thing at the bottom of the fuzzy chlorinated pool. That's nothing compared with the gurgling in my nostrils and the burning in the back of my throat. My concentration is shot. In my frazzled head, some kind of hazard light switches on. I try to focus on my escape plan and jam my gloved fingers into the snaps on the harness holding me in the Dunker. I shake them furiously and push away from the seat but don't get very far. The straps bite into my shoulders. I'm stuck. I can feel the first tug in my lungs. I'm very conscious of the ensuing alarm and monologue in my brain. Oxygen, please! You're underwater. You don't have all day. What are you going to do now? I pry my fingers into the release latches again and shake them around. Then I yank hard on the harnesses and kick against the floor. I'm still trapped. I look down at my chest to see if I can figure out the problem. No chance. There are too many bands and clasps on my gear. There are also too many bubbles. Now, as my lungs start to clench, the warning sirens start clanging in my head. My brain is no longer asking politely. It's shouting: Oxygen, now! In the classroom a few hours earlier, the instructors insisted that virtually anyone can be taught to get out of the Dunker. Their mantras were succinct. First, maintain your reference point. In the most chaotic situations, that means identifying and holding on to something that will help you stay oriented no matter how many times you flip over or get banged in the head. If you keep your point of reference, you will never get lost or confused and will always find a way out. I chose the handle on a door as my reference point. They didn't warn me the shot of water up my nose would distract me and make me let go. Still: That's the whole point. They're trying to disorient you. They want you to fail before you succeed. Their second mantra is to wait for all sudden and violent motion to stop. In the Dunker, that means surrendering to the whirling sensation of what it must feel like in a blender. Eventually, the chaos subsides, the tumult ceases, and it's a lot easier to handle the situation. Underwater, it can feel like an eternity, but it's typically only ten or fifteen seconds. That means you have plenty of air and time to unbuckle and get out. It all sounded great in theory. Another pang in my lungs. I'm really starting to worry. I try one more time with the buckles, poking, jiggling, and finally thrashing with my fingers. No luck. Now, slamming hard into the floor with my legs, I throw myself against the harness with all my weight. This is my version of brute force. It's my last gasp. If this doesn't work, I'll resort to the prayer sign. I strain and flail and then-incredibly-I'm free, floating in the cockpit. I'm so surprised and elated that I actually marvel for a moment at my weightlessness. I drift around, unfettered, but quickly realize that I'm lost and don't know the way to the designated exit hatch. Even more confusing, I'm not sure which way is up. I swish in every direction trying to identify the right door. Then I find it, fumble with the latch, and force my way out. I follow the bubbles up toward the light. With my lungs straining, I break the surface and take a huge gulp of air.

    The sun is setting over the palm trees at Miramar. F-18s thunder into the orange dusk. After thirteen hours of survival training, class is over, and our soaking flight suits are lined up on racks. Our boots, leaking great puddles, are set out to dry. As I get ready to go, the divers who watched from the bottom of the pool tell me that I looked a little "frenzied" trying to get out of the Dunker. Easy for them to say. Turns out my harness had actually released the first time I unbuckled it, but my survival vest had gotten snagged on the pilot's seat. In my turmoil, I hadn't been able to diagnose the problem. The frogmen say I had plenty of air and time and should have stayed calmer under pressure. Panic is the enemy. All those mental hazard lights, alarms, and sirens short-circuit our problem solving. We forget our training. We don't maintain our points of reference. We don't wait for the violent action to stop. We lose our minds and our way.

    No matter the adversity, the navy says, survival is a mentality, a way of thinking. Survival is also a lens, a way of perceiving the world around you. The best survivors in the military share a constant outlook and approach, which they believe can also be applied to the struggles of everyday life. They understand that crisis is inevitable and they anticipate adversity. When they face a challenge, they observe and analyze the situation, devise a plan, and move decisively. If things go wrong, they adapt and improvise. If they get overwhelmed, they recover quickly. They also know how to wait for the worst to end. Understanding that even misfortune gets tired and needs a break, they're able to hold back, identify the right moment, and then do what they need to do. Psychologists have a clunky term for this: active passiveness. It means recognizing when to stop and when to go. In a critical sense, doing nothing can mean doing something. Inaction can be action, and embracing this paradox can save your life.

    Lieutenant Commander Bates meets me at the front doors of her training center and hands over my exit papers or "qual sheets." She tells me I've earned a Q, the coveted grade for "qualified." Two other members of my class also receive their Qs. "Congratulations," she says with a farewell handshake. "You survived."

    (Continues...)




    Excerpted from The Survivors Club by Ben Sherwood Copyright © 2009 by Ben Sherwood. Excerpted by permission.
    All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
    Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.

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    Which is the safest seat on an airplane? Where is the best place to have a heart attack? Why does religious observance add years to your life? How can birthdays be hazardous to your health?


    THE SURVIVORS CLUB


    Each second of the day, someone in America faces a crisis, whether it's a car accident, violent crime, serious illness, or financial trouble. Given the inevitability of adversity, we all wonder: Who beats the odds and who surrenders? Why do some people bound back and others give up? How can I become the kind of person who survives and thrives?


    The fascinating, hopeful answers to these questions are found in THE SURVIVORS CLUB. In the tradition of Freakonomics and The Tipping Point, this book reveals the hidden side of survival by combining astonishing true stories, gripping scientific research, and the author's adventures inside the U.S. military's elite survival schools and the government's airplane crash evacuation course.


    With THE SURVIVORS CLUB, you can also discover your own Survivor IQ through a powerful Internet-based test called the Survivor Profiler. Developed exclusively for this book, the test analyzes your personality and generates a customized report on your top survivor strengths.


    There is no escaping life's inevitable struggles. But THE SURVIVORS CLUB can give you an edge when adversity strikes.


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    The best answers available to one of life's core questions: How can I survive danger?

    Even when we're in the safest of situations, we humans worry and wonder about survival. Whether we're imagining how we would escape from a burning building or plane; avoid a deadly wild animal attack; or stay alive as a psychopath's hostage, we all know that surviving is the bottom line. Los Angeles Times journalist Ben Sherwood traveled the world to learn the secrets that helped real men and women stay alive in moments of extreme physical crisis. The stories are gripping; the lessons could be lifesaving.
    Publishers Weekly
    Sherwood (The Man Who Ate the 747), a writer for the L.A. Times, travels worldwide to gain insight from people who have survived a slew of near fatal phenomena ranging from a mountain lion attack to a Holocaust concentration camp, and interviewing an array of experts to understand the psychology, genetics and jumble of other little things that determines whether we live or die. Readers curious about their own "survivor profile" can take an Internet test, which is explained in the book's later pages. Sherwood's assertion that survival is "a way of perceiving the world around you" is enlightening, as are some of the facts he uncovers: you have 90 seconds to leave a plane crash before the cabin temperature becomes unbearable; luck has more to do with personal perspective than chance. But Sherwood's balance of self-help, scientific theories and first-rate reporting is diminished by occasionally overwrought prose as well as the countless survivors' stories, which can run together in a touchy-feely stream of faith and optimism. (Jan.)

    Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
    Library Journal
    The people profiled here were definitely not looking to face their final moments on Earth; yet, when tragedy struck, they survived. Why? New York Times best-selling author Sherwood (The Death and Life of Charlie St. Cloud), who also narrates, examines why some people live while others die under the same circumstances. He presents even the most harrowing of escapes in a quiet and calming manner, preferring to focus on the bravery of a few than on the panic of many. Every library, regardless of size, should purchase this potentially lifesaving work. [Audio clip available through www.hachettebookgroup.com; more info at www.TheSurvivorsClub.org; the Grand Central hc was recommended "for large public libraries or to meet demand," LJ1/09.-Ed.]
    —Joseph L. Carlson
    Kirkus Reviews
    Sherwood (The Death and Life of Charlie St. Cloud, 2004, etc.) investigates why some live, others don't. His subjects are the people who closely encountered the proverbial cement truck when they stepped out the door one sunny morning, yet lived to tell about it: the woman who dropped six miles through the sky without a parachute; the man who ejected from his fighter plane at sea level doing Mach 1; the woman who fell on her knitting needle, which proceeded through her sternum directly into her heart. Their stories are gripping, to put it mildly, and Sherwood is enough of a storyteller to maintain the narrative pace throughout. He's also enough of a sideshow barker to write that this book "unlocks the secrets of who lives and who dies," though not with so straight a face as to sound like he's peddling snake oil. He probes each fantastic story for that mysterious something that pulled the person through. What role did nature play, and what role nurture? Luck is good, Sherwood discovers-luck being a product of openness to random opportunities around you-but keeping your head is critical. The composed often live, the stunned less so, the hysterical rarely. Being relaxed is also a plus, and religious belief, or surrendering to a higher power, has worked its charms. Statistical oddities are curious but unilluminating: Are lefties doomed to shorter lives? Do your initials condemn you? Sometimes the material beggars belief. Can someone who has sunk 20 feet into the ocean and "let seawater fill his lungs" really make it back? Still, Sherwood gains our trust with his Boy Scout common sense: Be prepared, play to your strengths, stay unruffled, keep the faith. The protagonists may have stayed calm,but these stories of cheating the reaper are crazy wild.
    Glenn Beck - The Glenn Beck Show
    The book is absolutely fantastic. If you haven't read The Survivors Club, you have to.
    From the Publisher
    The book is absolutely fantastic. If you haven't read The Survivors Club, you have to.—Glenn Beck, The Glenn Beck Show, Fox News

    A must-read.—The New York Times

    Editor's Choice: These are days when a survival guide really comes in handy. This entertaining book is a mix of helpful hints...and tales of bearing witness to survival.—Chicago Tribune

    A-minus.The true-life stories are satisfying...but it's the science that fascinates.—Entertainment Weekly

    A useful, insightful exploration of the nature of survival, the resilience of the human mind and body, and the ways in which we can all use our natural gifts to maximize our chances of coming through catastrophic situations.—Booklist

    [The] stories are gripping, to put it mildly... Sherwood gains our trust with his Boy Scout common sense: Be prepared, play to your strengths, stay unruffled, keep the faith.—Kirkus Reviews

    Enlightening...first-rate reporting.—Publishers Weekly

    Glenn Beck
    The book is absolutely fantastic. If you haven't read The Survivors Club, you have to.
    The Glenn Beck Show, Fox News
    The New York Times
    A must-read.
    Chicago Tribune
    Editor's Choice: These are days when a survival guide really comes in handy. This entertaining book is a mix of helpful hints...and tales of bearing witness to survival.
    Entertainment Weekly
    A-minus.The true-life stories are satisfying...but it's the science that fascinates.
    Booklist
    A useful, insightful exploration of the nature of survival, the resilience of the human mind and body, and the ways in which we can all use our natural gifts to maximize our chances of coming through catastrophic situations.

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