The Scottish Mail on Sunday - You

When talking to a stranger could save your life

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Wearing

My friend Lotte recently found herself on a busy tube on her way to work. As she boarded the carriage, she noticed every seat was taken but one. A big black bag was resting against the seat, making it impossible for her to sit down.

She did the obvious thing and asked if it was anyone’s bag. The morning commuters looked up at her, blinking with shock that someone should have the temerity to ask strangers on the tube a question. This being London, the unspoken rule is that everything remains unspoken. Talking on transport, as the hardened British citydwelle­r knows, is akin to whipping off your socks and massaging your bunions in full view of other people – that is to say: unseemly and disgusting.

‘Is this anyone’s bag?’ Lotte asked again.

She was greeted by shaking heads. No one claimed the bag. It was sitting there, unaccompan­ied luggage, just weeks after the horrifying attack on London Bridge, which had left two innocent people dead.

‘OK,’ Lotte said. ‘Just to let you know, there’s a bag here and it doesn’t seem to belong to anyone, so I’m getting off the carriage.’

She pulled the emergency alarm and duly stepped on to the platform. Not a single person followed. Instead, she left to the sound of tutting disapprova­l. It seemed to Lotte as though

her fellow commuters were more

Roksanda x Lululemon Inner Expanse Infinity Coat. It has done the unimaginab­le and essentiall­y made a duvet incredibly stylish.

bedazzling

my earlobes with Gold Quilted Mini Hoops from Eleven Fifteen. The perfectly sized hoop to announce itself, but not too showily. annoyed by the disruption than anything else.

‘What’s that about?’ she asked me later, still mystified.

We both knew, having lived in this city for many years, that tube passengers do not strike up conversati­on unless they are clueless American tourists who believe that being friendly will… well, win them friends. (As if! The only way to make friends is to wage a military-style campaign until you corner someone into submission through sheer force of will and a barrage of dinner invitation­s issued in advance.)

But to be so embarrasse­d that you put your own life at risk seemed to be taking things too far. I wonder now if it was symptomati­c of the human incapacity to deal with imminent crisis. So that in a moment of apparently life-or-death decision, a person is so terrified at what might happen that they subconscio­usly focus on trivialiti­es in order to keep calm. Instead of thinking, ‘Oh, that bag might blow up’ they think, ‘I’m going to be late for work and that would be awful.’

We’re all familiar with the fight-or-flight response – that our brains are hard-wired to react to threats in the same way that cavemen might have responded to attacks by predators. Our problem in the modern age is to identify what is a genuine threat. We are so overloaded with informatio­n that occasional­ly our brain will react with fear that the house is on fire, when in reality, the smoke alarm is going off because we have burned the toast.

But I was less familiar with the third response to a perceived threat, which is to freeze. Much like a rabbit in the headlights, a human can be so overwhelme­d that our brains shut down and dissociate from the experience.

Perhaps this is what was happening with Lotte’s tube carriage. In the end, there was no cause for alarm and no reports of an explosion on the Jubilee Line. Presumably, someone had forgotten their bag and those passengers made it to work.

Still, it’s worth thinking about. We might not want to talk to strangers on public transport, but sometimes our social embarrassm­ent is entirely misplaced.

she pulled the emergency alarm to the sound of tutting disapprova­l

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