BCDWYO
Member
If only perfect mistake-free people handled guns, this would be a pretty lonely forum! I had a ND into a tree in my back yard years ago. Scared the snot out of me and hopefully taught me a lesson.
March 20, 1994. Watching TV and dry firing my issued Glock 19. Guess I was still fascinated with it after going from a revolver. Had loaded mag out of gun behind me as I racked the slide and pulled the trigger.
This is a cop out. Gun type doesn't matter. Observe the rules 100% of the time and ND's won't happen.
Elevated risk comes from not paying attention to what you're doing.
I do NOT believe that everyone will have an ND.
AZ_M&P
Thanks for sharing; it takes guts to share something like that.
Haven't done one yet, so stories like this keep me concious about it.
I completely disagree.yes anyone who handles firearms long enough will have an accidental discharge.
This is more realistic.While negligent discharges aren't uncommon, I disagree with the notion that almost everyone who handles guns long enough is going to experience one.
Thanks for posting the 4 rules. We can't have them given to us enough. However, I would like to modify rule three if I may. What you posted is the time honored way. The new way is: 3. Be aware of your target and what's in line with it.3. KNOW WHAT IS BEYOND YOUR TARGET.
That's the lesson I was taught, but learned the hard way - ammo ALWAYS stays in a "hot room" when anything at all is happening with a weapon.