
@article{ref1,
title="'Never again'. Model mugging: a therapeutic resource for the psychiatric nurse",
journal="Journal of psychosocial nursing and mental health services",
year="1997",
author="Ellensweig, D.",
volume="35",
number="6",
pages="41-44",
abstract="I was in a room that had no windows and a disorienting effect. No light reached the room from outside and the fluorescent light gave the cement walls a forbidding appearance. The only sound was of my footsteps as they ricocheted off the walls, making them seem louder than ever. I felt cut off from the outside world. I was nervous, and my heart was beating loudly. I tried to remain calm, grounded, and in the present moment, but my mouth was dry, my shoulders tense, and my mind unable to focus. Seemingly out of nowhere I was grabbed from behind. Without thinking, my right arm swung up and around, glancing the side of my attacker's head. As I swung to the right with my arm. I pinched my fingers together and struck at his eyes. I flopped to the floor, laying on my left side with my right leg raised knee-to-nose and my arm raised to protect my head, waiting for him to come after me. He jumped on top of me but I kicked him in the head three times. He raised his hands to his forehead, signaling that I had hit his head hard enough with the heal of the foot to knock him unconscious. I stood up over him, stomped my foot, and yelled &quot;No! 9-1-1!&quot; Only then was I aware of the women behind me, cheering me on as I defended myself against an assault in the Model Mugging Program.<p /><p>Language: en</p>",
language="en",
issn="0279-3695",
doi="",
url="http://dx.doi.org/"
}