Training
Identify. Assess. Avoid.
We empower clients to make recognition-primed decisions to protect their immediate personal safety and future quality of life.
We teach teenagers and adults how to identify, assess, and avoid modern hazards.
Training Curricula
- Assessing Places for Potential Danger or Trouble
- Avoiding & Preventing False Allegations
- The Dangers of Participating in Group Culpability
- Driving Techniques to Avoid Robbery & Kidnapping
- Escaping Trouble After It Starts
- Evaluating Social Situations
- How to Speak & What to Say When Stakes Are High
- Interacting with the Police
- Interrogations by School Officials
- Justifiable Use of Force for Self-Defense
- Making Rapid Threat Assessments
- Personal Safety & Protection
- Rape Avoidance & Prevention
- Reading People
- Recognizing Signs of Imminent Violence
Our Courses
We offer private training customized to meet your specific needs.
Courses are a combination of classroom instruction followed by instructor-led field exercises. Classes can be delivered one-on-one or in a small group setting. Students must be a minimum of 15 years old and at least one parent must be present.
Today's Youth Face Different Threats
Teenagers have never known a world without smartphones, social media, and the widespread presence of private security cameras.
Previous generations had the luxury of making foolish mistakes without having to worry about their youthful misjudgments being permanently recorded on the Internet or in official police reports.
We now live in a “zero tolerance” society with merciless demands for documentation.
Trial and error learning is no longer a viable strategy for avoiding trouble that can have lifelong consequences. Serious threats to one’s personal, legal, and professional future often do not become obvious until after a precipitating event has already occurred.
Show me your friends and I’ll show you your future.
- Unknown
Laws of Possession in Texas
Multiple individuals can legally possess the same item in Texas.
This means that accepting a ride from someone who has illicit drugs in their car could result in criminal charges for possession. A 17-year-old who gives a ride to a “friend of a friend” can be arrested and charged with weapons or drug offenses.
Some parents deplete their life savings to pay their children’s legal fees. Assuming they “win” in court, their child can still have a permanent criminal arrest record that future employers will hold against them, even if they won’t admit it.
RDR teaches teenagers and young adults how to avoid these situations in the first place.