When You Decided To Carry

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No specific event, and not simply because it was legal. Lots of thought involved over a long period of time.

10,000 years ago I would have been armed with a spear. 1,000 years ago I would have been armed with a sword. Today I am armed with a handgun. The reason is the same.
 
Got my CCW license a little less than a year after Kentucky became a shall-issue state--never carried concealed before it was legal. I'm one of those silly law-abiding types.

Made the decision for several reasons, all involving people who, mostly for no reason, had threatened me. I mean total strangers whom I'd done nothing to offend. Except drive no more than ten over the limit in the slow lane.

There were also some I had helped put in jail or the penitentiary, but that's another story.

Anyway, it seemed like a good idea sixteen plus years ago, and I've never looked back. Life is much tamer in old age, retirement, and declining health; but now I need protection more when I venture out because running and fighting are out of the question.
 
Never thought about it until a few years ago.

The elderly couple across the street from us was bound, gagged and locked in their laundry room by someone fleeing the police. He then stole their car.

Two months later I was legal and everyone in the family was learning to shoot.
 
I still dont physically carry all the time. I did periodically start to carry at about 20 years old but only when threatened. Then I got into guard jobs for the next 35 years where we were required to open carry. I may not CC much on me but I always have one by me wherever I go. Have the permit, and in utah we can open carry but I never do except sometimes ATVing.
 
I've had guns all my life but only started carrying about a year ago. I really don't know exactly why I decided to get a handgun permit but part of it was poor health and a feeling that I'd have difficulty physically defending myself. Also, I'd heard about all the Tennesseans getting permits and didn't want to be the only unarmed man in town.
 
I first got a carry permit about 40 years ago, mid 70s. I didn't have to
give it much thought at all. Being a gun enthusiast, it seemed like
the natural thing to do. My dad wasn't a real gun person but he did
own one handgun and had a carry permit. He told me about the time
some guy tried to take his billfold at knifepoint and he pulled his
pistol on the guy. The would be robber went from demanding to
begging real quick, begging my dad not to shoot him. I was a teenager
at the time, too young to carry but I'm sure that influenced me
somewhat.
 
I got my first carry permit in 1969. I was driving local delivery with cash involved and my boss was worried about his money. He ask me if I would get a permit to carry to protect his cash. I don't think he was ever worried about me.:rolleyes:
Back in those days we had to list the exact gun on the permit that was going to be carried for protection.
 
Prior to 1989 Joe Law Abiding couldn't even get a carry permit. Tennessee struggled for years implementing May Issue and Shall Issue law. It really wasn't until 96 that they got things ironed out so that the law abiding could obtain a permit on a statewide basis without hassle and confusion. As much as folks like to say how wonderful gun laws are in the South, Tennessee was not much better than NYC regarding carry.

Good question. No personal event or anything like that. A carry permit was obtainable. I was a gun enthusiast. I got a permit. That's about it. It's not like I was overly concerned with my safety and finally breathing a sigh of relief that I could walk the streets without fear of not being able to defend myself. I don't know... if I wasn't already a gun enthusiast I might not have bought a gun and got a permit. Now I can't imagine not being armed.
 
I did my career in los angeles county california. It was next to impossible to get a CC permit there. I didnt worry about it as we had to OC on the job and I practically lived at work. I didnt much worry over the matter off the job and yes, I can remember at least two incidents I had to do some explaining but the issue wasnt pressed and I kept my gun and ammo. Wouldnt want to try it there now though.
 
My decision was made after the wife, dogs and I encountered a pack of hungry coyotes. Around these parts, the two legged varmits are rare however the four legged variety are everywhere. I can open carry legally but it annoys others and I would rather have it under my coat or jacket anyway. To do that required a concealed carry permit.
 
I chose to carry because I have always SEEN things.
Always tried to help or be involved in some way. Be it putting out a fire
or helping someone in need.
I like to be prepared.
I first open carried in VA 1974 .
It was a 36 Navy by High Standard.
I never fired at another person. But have deterred actions which could have been very bad by others. Without help from my pals Smith and Wesson I don't know what the results would have been.
 
Pre-LEO days I was always an enthusiast and WANTED to carry, but at that time, CC was not legal in Ohio. My dad was a cop and I would often ride along with him on duty and as others have said, I SAW things and being a cop's kid, I heard and learned things that a "normal" person would never hear or know. So from a young age, I knew the world was NOT all sunshine and roses.
 
Put off getting a CPL for years, didn't want the responsibility. Finally got one five years ago, couldn't ignore the headlines or evening news any longer. Still think about the responsibility thing every time I holster the piece.
 
I had thought about getting a permit a long time before finally making the decision to do it. In Texas one needs no permit to have a gun in the vehicle normally, unless one has a criminal
record.

The event that finally tipped the balance was the terrorist jihadist attack at Ft. Hood. Subsequent jihadist attacks at the Little Rock recruiting station and in Boston validate that decision. I decided that nobody is going to protect us but ourselves. The frequency and repetitive nature of watching thugs get released over and over also convinced me that police cannot protect a citizen, and I am from a family
of law enforcement.
 
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I was always interested in firearms. ...so that obviously helps. When I was 15 I worked summers for my dad in his office. His office was located in Philadelphia on the corner of Broad and Olny (those from Philly know what I'm talking about). This was in the mid 90s. Since then the area has gotten better but back then it was safer to be a rabbi in the middle of the sunni triangle then it was being in N. Philly. Anyway, my mom would pick me up after work and we would go home. One day as we walked to the car, in the lot down the street, my mom got mugged. As we approached the car some guy ran from behind, grabbed her purse and ran off. I don't know if he followed us or was already there and just saw an opportunity but nonetheless she got mugged. This is before cell phones so we walked back to my dad's office to call the police. Since this had already happened and no one was physically hurt it took the cops 2 hours to respond (that's a busy part of Philly). The cop took a report and told my dad to get a permit and a gun and next time plug the s o b and we will thank you.

My dad never did get the permit (he did but many many years later). And in this case it wouldn't have mattered anyway since he was not there. However, I took the officer's words to heart (this doesnt mean im looking to shoot people) and as soon as I turned 21 I got my 1st gun and my permit.

Sent from my SCH-I545 using Tapatalk
 
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After open carrying every day in Vietnam from 5/25/68 to 10/30/69, except for R&R's and one 30 day leave, I felt naked coming back to the world. As the years passed the feeling abated somewhat but there was always that sense of absence.

About five years ago the wife an I were sitting at a red light when a car drove up on the raised median, drove around us and then blocked traffic in our two north bound lanes. Two young men exited the back seat with their hands under their t-shirts. I saw a momentary flash of steel. They came down between the two rows of cars walking past our car. I looked in my mirror and saw a car three cars behind us unload and the occupants start running the other direction. The two gang bangers went back to their car which had moved to the south bound lanes and took off after the fleeing targets. I started case carrying that afternoon.

Three years ago I got to be a juror in a criminal case. Aggravated discharge of a firearm at an occupied vehicle was the charge. We found the defendant guilty. It was only after we were excused that we found out this was his third gun violation. This is when I started donating to Illinois carry organizations.

I started carrying concealed when my CCL arrived 3/22/14. Haven't been unarmed since except in prohibited areas.
 
I used to go hiking a lot before losing my leg. Always thought it was a good idea to protect me, the family and the house.
In over thirty years of carrying I have never had to use it but many times I felt better knowing it was there.
Still carry at times but I give more thought about retention because I do fall. Don't want a discharge or unwanted revealing.
 
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