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On Combat: The Psychology and Phsiology of Deadly Conflict in War and Peace Paperback – January 1, 2007

4.8 4.8 out of 5 stars 2,162 ratings

On Combat looks at what happens to the human body under the stresses of deadly battle — the impact on the nervous system, heart, breathing, visual and auditory perception, memory - then discusses new research findings as to what measures warriors can take to prevent such debilitations so they can stay in the fight, survive, and win.A brief, but insightful look at history shows the evolution of combat, the development of the physical and psychological leverage that enables humans to kill other humans, followed by an objective examination of domestic violence in America. The authors reveal the nature of the warrior, brave men and women who train their minds and bodies to go to that place from which others flee. After examining the incredible impact of a few true warriors in battle, On Combat presents new and exciting research as to how to train the mind to become inoculated to stress, fear and even pain.Expanding on Lt. Col. Grossman’s popular "Bulletproof mind" presentation, the book explores what really happens to the warrior after the battle, and shows how emotions, such as relief and self-blame, are natural and healthy ways to feel about having survived combat. A fresh and highly informative look at post traumatic stress syndrome (PTSD) details how to prevent it, how to survive it should it happen, how to come out of it stronger, and how to help others who are experiencing it.On Combat looks at the critical importance of the debriefing, when warriors gather after the battle to share what happened, critique, learn from each other and, for some, begin to heal from the horror. The reader will learn a highly effective breathing technique that not only steadies the warrior’s mind and body before and during the battle, but can also be used afterwards as a powerful healing device to help separate the emotion from the memory.Concluding chapters discuss the Christian/Judeo view of killing in combat and offers powerful insight that Lt. Col. Grossman has imparted over the years to help thousands of warriors understand and come to terms with their actions in battle. A final chapter encourages warriors to always fight for justice, not vengeance, so that their remaining days will be healthy ones filled with pride for having performed their duty morally and ethically.This information-packed book ploughs new ground in its vision, in its extensive new research and startling findings, and in its powerful, revealing quotes and anecdotes from top people in the warrior community, people who have faced the toxic environment of deadly combat and now share their wisdom to help others. On Combat is easy to read and powerful in scope. It is a true classic that will be read by new and veteran warriors for years to come.
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4.8 out of 5 stars
2,162 global ratings

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Customers say

Customers find the book well-written and informative. They appreciate the original research into mental processes and tips for realistic training. The book helps them prepare mentally, physically, emotionally, and spiritually for combat. It catalogs emotional and physiological reactions and how to manage those reactions in everyday life. Readers consider the book a good value for money and say it's priceless for military and police personnel. Overall, they describe it as an engaging read for all ages.

AI-generated from the text of customer reviews

378 customers mention "Readability"361 positive17 negative

Customers find the book well-written and informative. They say it's a must-read for warriors, police officers, soldiers, and even civilians. The book is described as an eyeopener and the best in the business.

"...There are dozens of quotations from the Greek classics, from Scripture, from Shakespeare, from traditional hymnody and from a wide variety of wide..." Read more

"When it comes to combative science, this is the best book in the business...." Read more

"This book should be required reading for all warriors. This is the most informative and useful book that I h ave ever read." Read more

"Excellent read if you're interested in the topic material. This isn't a self-defense book, though, so make sure you understand what you're reading...." Read more

293 customers mention "Insight"288 positive5 negative

Customers find the book informative and useful. They say it helps prepare mentally, physically, emotionally, and spiritually. The book provides excellent tips for realistic training and covers combative science related to psychological street survival. Readers describe it as a life-changing book that teaches ways of controlling responses in tense situations.

"...It offers a cornucopia of insights into how best to think about and process in a healthy way the complex experiences and emotions of being in combat..." Read more

"...It cover the much needed education combative science (Physiological and Physiological issues) related to combatives...." Read more

"This book should be required reading for all warriors. This is the most informative and useful book that I h ave ever read." Read more

"...The other information is sooo flippin valuable if you're a soldier, cop, or author. Truly this is a must buy for those three categories...." Read more

33 customers mention "Psychological impact"33 positive0 negative

Customers find the book helpful for coping with the emotional and psychological effects of combat. They appreciate the cataloging of emotional and physiological reactions and how to manage them. The book provides training principles and ways to handle the aftermath of combat, especially for anyone in a high-stress career. It helps readers understand how their body naturally responds to a tense situation and how mental strength is much more important at times. Readers also mention that it delved into the human psyche and physical responses to combat.

"...The thing I thought was amazing in this book is the description of the psychological and physiological responses to a violent and fearful encounter...." Read more

"...This book has helped me prepare mentally, physically, emotionally, and spiritually, and I highly recommend it to other sheepdogs." Read more

"...perform in condition yellow, red, and black, and ways to manage those conditions is phenomenal...." Read more

"...decision by allowing you to understand how your body naturally responds to a tense situation and by teaching you ways of controlling those responses...." Read more

16 customers mention "Value for money"16 positive0 negative

Customers find the book a good value. They say it's informative for military and police personnel, and a follow-up to On Killing: The Psychological Cost of Learning. Readers appreciate the author's qualifications and find the material appropriate.

"...Both books highly recommended and well worth the $15.00 you might spend on the paperback versions on Amazon." Read more

"...Great price, great condition. I'm very pleased." Read more

"Good read of value" Read more

"...That discussion is extensive, absolutely valid to me, but belongs in a separate book. It's lost inside the book...." Read more

8 customers mention "Book for everyone"8 positive0 negative

Customers find the book informative and motivating for all ages. They say it's great for military and civilians who want to understand the sacrifices made by service members and their families.

"...officer, firefighter, paramedic, etc this is a fantastic book for them to read...." Read more

"...Great book for any adult." Read more

"This is a book that all Warriors, future Warriors and there families should read...." Read more

"A great book for any one who could be forced to use deadly force. If you are a sheep dog and not a sheeple you need to read this book...." Read more

If you are one who serves, serve yourself with this book.
5 out of 5 stars
If you are one who serves, serve yourself with this book.
God bless Lt.Col Grossman for his fine work helping warriors . Every soldier,Police office and gun carrying citizen needs this information.Every family member of a combat veteran no matter how long ago needs this information.from the history of combat to the mindset needed for combat, to the changes it can sometimes being about its all here. If you send men to fight, lead men into the fight or may one day may be in the fight, you will be well served to have armed yourself with this knowledge before hand.
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Top reviews from the United States

  • Reviewed in the United States on August 15, 2007
    With this review of "On Combat," I am departing from past practices in The White Rhino Report. This is the first review of a book that I will offer as a multi-part discussion of the book. The reason is simple. There is simply so much meat in "On Combat" that I cannot adequately respond to it all within the confines of one Blog posting.

    Last week, when I review Lt. Col. Grossman's first book, "On Killing," I mentioned my friend, Kevin, who flies helicopters as part of the Army's elite 160th Special Operations Aviation Regiment. In an e-mail conversation I had earlier today with Kevin, he talked about his anticipation of reading my reaction to the book he told me I must read next - "On Combat":

    "It will be interesting to see what you think about `On Combat' (my personal Bible)."

    Kevin is a West Point graduate who is the veteran of two deployments to Iraq. He knows a great deal about combat - from a historical, theoretical and experiential perspective. For someone like Kevin to call "On Combat" his "Bible" speaks to the fact that there is a mother lode of gold-plated wisdom and practical guidance for warriors contained within the almost 400 pages of this book.

    The full title of this sequel to "On Killing" is: "On Combat - The Psychology and Physiology of Deadly Conflict in War and in Peace." Collaborating with Lt. Colonel Dave Grossman on the writing of this book is Loren W. Christensen, a veteran of 29 years in law enforcement, including time served as a military police officer in Vietnam. In this book, Grossman has expanded his focus from a study of killing to the broader study of combat. The expansion takes on additional dimension, because he now addresses a broader audience of warriors. In this book, the term "combat" refers not only to armed conflict on traditional fields of battle, but also to the deadly force situation that police officers often find themselves confronting. As further expansion of the concept of "combat," the book also offers chilling evidence that hyper-realistic violent video games and certain other violence-filled entertainment vehicles are turning our children into pseudo-warriors - yet without the discipline and restraints that true warriors learn as part of their training and socialization.

    In a sense, "On Combat" is really four books in one. It is a handbook for warriors to use on the battlefield and upon their return home. It offers a cornucopia of insights into how best to think about and process in a healthy way the complex experiences and emotions of being in combat. At a second level, it serves as a similar kind of manual for police officers faced with the need to use deadly force, or to respond to assailants who use deadly force. At a third level, the book serves as a briefing tool for those who would aspire to be what Grossman calls "Peace Warriors" - those dedicated to making the world as safe and healthy a place as possible for ourselves and our children. Finally, in its emphasis on the deleterious effects of violent media on the minds of children and teenagers, it serves as a manual for parents and educators who need to understand the depth of the problem and the seriousness of the danger.

    What makes Grossman's writing so compelling for me is the fact that he constructs his arguments and offers his case studies laid upon a solid foundation of experience, education and erudition. He quotes liberally - or, perhaps I should say "judiciously" - from the received wisdom of those who have gone before us. There are dozens of quotations from the Greek classics, from Scripture, from Shakespeare, from traditional hymnody and from a wide variety of wide writers and thinkers from the past. Such attributions add validity and texture to the contemporary examples that the authors offer to tell their stories and make their well-considered points.

    Let me offer an excerpts from the fourth "handbook" I mentioned above - the guidebook for parents and educators in addressing issues of children's exposure to violent media:

    "Until children are six or seven years old, they have great difficulty differentiating between fantasy and reality. That is why we do not use them as witnesses in court. We do not send people to prison on the word of a five-ear-old, since kids at that age are so malleable and suggestible. When children between two and six years of age see someone on television getting shot, stabbed, brutalized, degraded, and murdered, those images are real to them, as real as anything in their young lives." (Page 230)

    In further explaining the impact of violent media upon children, the author invokes Socrates' words in Plato's "The Republic." As I read these words - first penned over 2,000 years ago - I was struck by their immediate relevance to the issues we struggle with today in dealing with violence in our media:

    "What is this education to be then? Perhaps we shall hardly invent a system better than the one which long experience has worked out, with its two branches for the cultivation of the mind and the body. And I suppose we shall begin with the mind, before we start physical training.

    And the beginning, as you know, is always the most important part, especially in dealing with anything young and tender. That is the time when character is being molded and easily takes any impression one may wish to stamp on it.

    Then shall we simply allow our children to listen to any stories that anyone happens to make up, and so receive into their minds ideas often the very opposite of those we shall think they ought to have when they grow up?

    No, certainly not.

    It seems, then, our first business will be to supervise the making of fables and legends, rejecting all which are unsatisfactory; and we shall induce nurses and mothers to tell their children only those which we have approved, and to think more of molding their souls with these stories . . . Most of the stories now is use must be discarded.

    The worst of all faults, especially if the story is ugly and immoral as well as false - misrepresenting the nature of gods and heroes.

    A child cannot distinguish between the allegorical sense from the literal, and the ideas he takes in at that age are likely to become indelibly fixed; hence the great importance of seeing that the first stories he hears shall be designed to produce the best possible effect on his character." (Page 230)

    Grossman takes this cogent argument into the 21st century with these follow-up comments:

    "Think of the impact of violent media as a boot camp for kids, their own little basic training. As they sit before the tube, hour after hour, they learn that violence is good and violence is needed. They see it, experience it - and they believe it. The are inundated with the violence factor, but they never get the discipline. Now, if it troubles you that young soldiers have to go through a process of traumatization and brutalization, you should be infinitely more troubled that we are doing the same thing indiscriminately to our children without the safeguard of discipline . . . Our job is to protect our children, not rape their innocence when they are six. We can no more share our favorite violent movie (or TV show or video game) with our kids than we can share sex with them" (Pages 231)

    My four sons range in age from 25 to 33. When they were being raised, we tried to be careful about these issues, but that was before the dramatic escalation in the level of realistic violence now available in high definition. As I read Grossman's words, I found myself saying a silent prayer of thanksgiving that my son and daughter-in-law show great wisdom, vigilance and restraint in monitoring the content of the media that their young daughter and son are exposed to.

    In Part II of my review, I will discuss the author's tripartite depiction of the kinds of people that inhabit our world: sheep, wolves and sheepdogs.

    Stay tuned.

    Al
    16 people found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United States on August 13, 2024
    When it comes to combative science, this is the best book in the business. It cover the much needed education combative science (Physiological and Physiological issues) related to combatives.
    I highly recommend this much needed book on a subject too often ignored and for granted. Whether your law enforcement, military or a CCW holder, the information in this book can prove life saving.
  • Reviewed in the United States on August 5, 2024
    This book should be required reading for all warriors. This is the most informative and useful book that I h ave ever read.
  • Reviewed in the United States on May 15, 2016
    Excellent read if you're interested in the topic material. This isn't a self-defense book, though, so make sure you understand what you're reading. This book helps readers to understand the effects that combat can have on the human mind and body.
    Now, as a writer, this book was crucial for me. It truly helped me to understand the psychology of my characters during times of intense stress.

    This is definitely a must read for any author who includes any form of combat in their books.

    But, now, just so you don't think I'm a friend of the author, let me tear into this book a little bit:
    There's basically an entire chapter dedicated towards convincing the reader that violent media will turn children into criminals. Personally, I didn't care much for this chapter. I still read it, and I'm glad that I did, because now I know more about this issue-- but it seemed entirely irrelevant to the rest of this book.
    What really got me, too, was that the author already wrote another book on this exact topic. So not only did he go off course with this book, he also gave his audience no reason to buy his other book, because the main information was already discussed.
    But here's an easy fix: when you get to the chapter about children and violent media, skip it, if you're inclined to do so. Personally, I'm glad I read it, but it just seemed like the author really veered off course.
    But that's the only reason I didn't give this book 6 stars out of 5-- that and Amazon wouldn't let me. ;)
    The other information is sooo flippin valuable if you're a soldier, cop, or author. Truly this is a must buy for those three categories. The first two save lives, and the third has to authentically portray this in writing.
    4 people found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United States on January 5, 2017
    This is a must read if you are in any profession that involves danger or a citizen that wants to be part of the solution and not the problem. The thing I thought was amazing in this book is the description of the psychological and physiological responses to a violent and fearful encounter. If you read all about this you will see that many of the police involved shootings were because of nature and not a war on the minorities in this country. It also allows you to see that the police need way better training to be able to counter these byproducts of their dangerous profession.

    I am torn on the authors theory that violent movies and headlines are causing the youth to go and shoot up schools. I think that that kind of stuff is probably not healthy but something else must be going on to make a person commit this type of horror.

    The chapters on PTSD and veterans coming home are also very timely. It will allow the regular Joe like me to better understand some of the issues our veterans and police are dealing with.
    23 people found this helpful
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Top reviews from other countries

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  • Juan
    5.0 out of 5 stars Excelente libro. Mal vendedor
    Reviewed in Mexico on January 28, 2023
    El libro es bueno, un analisis objetivo de lo que pasa en combates y como funcionamos en dichas situaciones. El vendedor "Jenson Books Inc" no vende la 4ta edicion ni es nueva como lo anuncia, es la tercera edición y viene golpeado en una bolsa plastica que además venia rota. No lo voy a regresar porque es más trabajo que quedarmelo.
  • CS
    5.0 out of 5 stars Awesome
    Reviewed in Spain on March 3, 2022
    I got this book recommended by my friends in the law enforcement, here in Spain. It is so enlightening that I asked my Criminology students to read it and write an essay. The ones who'll become police officer will have a foresight of what's coming, the other ones will understand better the insights of protecting society and the toll our agents pay. Highly recommendable.
  • Luciano da Silva Rodrigues
    5.0 out of 5 stars Uma grande obra sobre a atividade de proteger
    Reviewed in Brazil on September 22, 2019
    Os vários aspectos relacionados à atividade de proteger estão bem trabalhados entes livro. Enfoques sobre fisiologia, psicologia, filosofia e ética presentes no caminho do guerreiro tornam a leitura deste livro algo importantíssimo para quem desejar conhecer melhor está função tão importante para a sociedade.
  • dogoforever
    5.0 out of 5 stars ottimo
    Reviewed in Italy on January 26, 2020
    testo che tutti gli operatori dovrebbero aver letto.
  • JF Bonnin
    5.0 out of 5 stars A lire absolument.
    Reviewed in France on September 19, 2018
    Que vous pratiquiez ou non un art du combat.