Supadupa69
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Your body can’t go where your mind has never been.
Interesting thread. Never been in the military and I'm not a LEO so monthly gun games are the only shooting under stress training that I can afford to do. I don’t have thousands of dollars to go to Gunsite for a couple weeks every year. I shoot as often as I can with a variety of firearms and a variety of disciplines. I try to shoot as clean and as fast as I can. Btw, I’m only 72.
Because he says he was in the military; hence he is a superior being.
Long carry experience here. NO shots fired in anger.I've never been an LEO. I am a veteran, but was a cold warrior. I did shoot IDPA regularly for about 12 years. That taught me a lot about shooting, movement and use of cover. I like to think that, if necessary, I could handle myself in a SD situation. But I'm not eager to test that assumption.
What I do believe is that the best way to survive a gun fight is to not get in one. That's my goal.![]()
None of my training or experience really prepared me for my 1974 gunfight. Most of our training back then was bulls-eye shooting instead of being taught to fight w/a gun. All I can offer is to get some good training & put in as much range time as possible.
None of my training or experience really prepared me for my 1974 gunfight. Most of our training back then was bulls-eye shooting instead of being taught to fight w/a gun. All I can offer is to get some good training & put in as much range time as possible.
What is an AHWAG?
Laughed out loud. This is the post of the day for the whole internet!....But the most convenient use of The Fantasy Gun Fight Syndrome is trying to convince your Finance Minister that the kids college fund is short because you're prepairing for war.
I copied AHWAG from John Correia, who possibly was the one who coined the acronym, who wants us to avoid granting the shooter the benefit of notoriety. Let the names of Pedro and Rosa, the Pineda's, and Victor Gomez be remembered forever!Aardvark With A Gun. Maybe not 'aardvark'....
Mark Twain said that it's easier to fool someone than convince them that they have been fooled.
Fantasy Gun Fighting has sold more widgets than anything else to come down the pike.
But try to convince someone that they have been fooled into desecrating their carry weapon with every accessory known to man. They will be quick to tell you all about how their pistol is set up to knock down communist rocket attacks and kill snipers firing from passing jet liners.
But the most convenient use of The Fantasy Gun Fight Syndrome is trying to convince your Finance Minister that the kids college fund is short because you're prepairing for war.
Something I notice a lot on the Internet and in person. People scripting their gunfight based on movies, stories, the internet, heck even real experience or history.
Try to keep the mind open to possibilities and war game it in your head but don’t assume you know what distance, location, time of day, circumstances or number of rounds you’ll need.
Yeah statistics can help but don’t assume anything.
Train for worse case scenarios. Train at longer distances than statistically expected. Train for multiple targets that are moving and require more rounds on target than statistically expected. Induce some stress while training.
Just something I’ve noticed. I see people cutting their training short because of statistics like:
Most gun fights are 7 yards and in or they are usually 3 rounds at 3 yards in 3 seconds and so on.
Train like they happen at 25 yards in 1.5 seconds.
Just some of my thoughts.
Yours?
Where you want your first bullet to go......Is the button between the shirt pockets..........I don't waste time with games.
Scripting/choreographing a gunfight ? What was the Elder Von Moltke said ?-"No plan of operations survives first contact with the enemy." In developing Jeet Kune Do Bruce Lee emphasized fluidity and speed of reaction, if something doesn't work you can quickly move to something that does. Life is 90% Theater of the Improv, ad libbed, IMHO SD should be approached the same way. Skill training teaches you HOW to do things, you still need to learn what to do, size up situations.
IMHO Bullseye shooting, learning proper marksmanship is the basis for combat shooting. Ed McGiven emphasized that the sights ARE used in fast shooting-Jeff Cooper said the same thing, Bill Jordan noted that Charlie Askins became an advocate of the semiauto only AFTER hs gunfightng days were over.