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Owen Army

98 members • Free

36 contributions to Owen Army
Welcome Yaya Bojang to Owen Army!
Welcome Yaya Bojang to Owen Army! One of the guys I've been mentoring from the Gambia Africa recently joined Owen Army. He is a huge fan of We Fight Monsters and the mission Ben & Jess set out to accomplish. Yaya wants to make a difference in his country for his people and his family. This is a good place to learn.
0 likes • 2d
I love the shirt!!
Accountability Loop and Victim Loop
I’ve seen this loop more times than I can count. ➡️ Not on a whiteboard. ➡️ Not in a classroom. But in living rooms at 2 a.m., on the side of the road, in kitchens turned into crime scenes, and in the aftermath of choices people refuse to own. This image captures something policing teaches you very quickly: Every situation gives you two paths. 🔁 One is the Accountability Loop. 🔁 The other is the Victim Loop. In policing, we respond to the situation—the call for service. What happens next is rarely about lack of options. It’s about intention. I’ve stood across from people who: • ignored every warning • denied obvious facts • blamed everyone but themselves • rationalized harmful behavior • resisted help • hid behind excuses Not because they couldn’t choose differently—but because accountability is uncomfortable. ▪️The victim loop is seductive. ▪️It protects the ego. ▪️It removes responsibility. ▪️It gives people someone else to blame: the system, their upbringing, their partner, the economy, the police, society. And the longer someone stays in that loop, the harder it becomes to break free. The accountability loop is harder—but it’s the only one that leads anywhere worth going. It requires: • recognizing reality • owning your role • making a choice • taking action • learning from failure • self-examination • forgiveness (of self and others) I’ve watched people change their lives when they step into that loop. I’ve also watched people burn every bridge available because they refused to. This isn’t just policing. ‼️It’s leadership. ‼️It’s parenting. ‼️It’s relationships. ‼️It’s life. And if we’re honest, this image is also a mirror for society right now. We increasingly reward excuses, elevate victimhood, and treat accountability as cruelty instead of growth. We explain behavior away instead of confronting it. We externalize everything—then wonder why nothing changes. Policing doesn’t create this reality. It just encounters it earlier and more often than most.
Accountability Loop and Victim Loop
1 like • 7d
Hope you don't mind but I just changed my PC background to the loop picture (including your name at the bottom). I want people to see that when I share my screen on video calls.
1 like • 7d
Nailed it!! Best one yet! That hit me hard. Loved everything about it. I hope everyone shares and get loads of donations coming in to fund the mission.
Who are you if you don’t have your story.
This is more of a general discussion post. I was asked this question a while back and it forced me to really look internally and my answer was a simple I am who I am regardless of the story. I’m curious, what would your answers be?
1 like • 13d
If my story were different, I would be different, but its not, so I yam what I yam.
1 like • 12d
@Ayman Kafel Who I am at my core was shaped by my story. If I remove the story, I will be who I am without knowing why I am who I am. Maybe I'm simply misunderstanding the exercise in this question.
The Psychology of Deception
Most people think lying is simple. It’s not. Lying is work—and understanding why people lie and how the brain behaves under deception can help civilians navigate everyday life more safely and intelligently. This isn’t about interrogations. It’s about situational awareness, boundaries, and discernment. Why People Lie (At a Human Level) People don’t usually lie because they’re “bad people.” They lie because their brain is trying to avoid consequences. That consequence could be: - Social embarrassment - Reputational damage - Financial loss - Relationship fallout - Accountability When someone feels threatened—emotionally or socially—the nervous system activates, and deception becomes a coping strategy The Hidden Cost of Lying: Cognitive Load Telling the truth is simple. You just recall what happened. Lying is mentally expensive. A person who lies has to: - Suppress the real story - Invent a believable alternative - Keep it consistent over time - Anticipate questions - Monitor how they’re coming across That mental strain often shows up indirectly—not as obvious “tells,” but as subtle changes in behavior What Civilians Often Notice (Without Realizing Why) When someone is under cognitive strain from deception, you may observe: - Delayed or overly careful answers - Vague language instead of specifics - Over-control of emotions (too calm, too rehearsed) - Deflecting instead of directly answering - Inconsistencies over time Important note: These don’t prove someone is lying. But patterns matter more than moments. Emotional “Leakage” Is Real Even when someone tries to control themselves, emotions can leak through: - Anxiety about being exposed - Guilt or shame - Occasionally, subtle satisfaction at “getting away with it” These leaks are often brief and unconscious—which is why listening and observing calmly is more powerful than confrontation Why This Matters for Everyday Life For civilians, this knowledge helps you:
1 like • 18d
Great insight!
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Robert Eidson
4
61points to level up
@robert-eidson-5380
Ex-Navy. 17 years sober. Work full time and volunteer 400+ hrs a year plus organize volunteer events

Active 23h ago
Joined Nov 3, 2025
Gainesville Ga
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