Articles Lifestyle Mr Old Man This Is What Survival Looks Like By Mr Old Man Posted on February 21, 2026 3 min read 0 0 31 Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Share on Google+ Share on Reddit Share on Pinterest Share on Linkedin Share on Tumblr I was sitting at my usual café on the fifth day of the Lunar New Year. An Americano in front of me, phone in hand. Scrolling through Facebook, I came across a long post by a banking lecturer about the 1973 Norrmalmstorg incident — crisis management, survival probabilities, the psychology of extreme situations. After reading it, I found myself thinking about the recent bank robbery cases. None of the perpetrators ultimately escaped. It made me reflect on something simple: sometimes the calmest person in a crisis is the one standing behind the counter. Not because they are fearless. But because they understand a basic principle — in a crisis, the most important thing is not to escalate it. In such moments, “crisis management” at the frontline may sound indistinguishable from routine customer service: “Which denominations would you prefer, sir?” “I’m preparing the cash now. Please give me a moment.” “Your mask has slipped slightly — could you adjust it for everyone’s safety?” No confrontation. No heroics. No dramatic gestures. Just maintaining a steady tone, preventing the atmosphere from tightening further. Strategy can be discussed in meeting rooms. On the frontline, composure is often the most effective response. Over morning coffee, I found myself feeling a quiet respect for frontline bank staff. They may not speak in the language of crisis theory. But they know how to say a sentence that lowers someone else’s heartbeat by a few beats. That, perhaps, is what survival really means. And perhaps the Lunar New Year — a season of renewal and reflection — makes that quiet strength feel even more visible. ____ Mr. Old Man At Traditional Café