hastings
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Have any of you ever lost a friend or failed to deepen a friendship/relationship because of your interest in firearms?
Twenty five years ago I was dating a woman who was a gifted artist. I felt like we hit it off on many levels, but one day after speaking to an old friend on the phone she asked me what we had talked about, not in an rude way, just curious. I explained that my friend and I had enjoyed shooting rifles and reloading, and we were reminiscing about those times. It was like I threw water in her face. She became hostile, insisted I get rid of any guns I might still have, and break off any associations with friends who shared this interest. I tried to reason with her, but from her perspective I had just become the antichrist.
Long story short, I explained that while guns were not more valuable to me than her, my experiences and friendships that had developed around hunting, skeet shooting, and the outdoor sporting lifestyle, were part of who I was and if she couldn't accept them she would not be happy with me for very long. End of relationship. I subsequently met and married my wife and mother of my three children, and couldn't be happier with the way things turned out.
Then, recently, my daughter (7years old at the time) developed a friendship with a classmate who lived a short distance away. Her parents are vegetarian, yoga practicing new age types. I have nothing against any of that, and was happy with the friendship my daughter had found. One day, the child's parents called to set up a play-date. My wife suggested an alternative day because we were going target shooting (as a family). The child's family immediately stated that their child was not allowed to come to our house and they were not comfortable with the relationship any longer. I tried to explain that our firearms were locked safely away, and we teach safe gun handling to our children, but that it was a multigenerational family tradition, not a terrorist activity. Unfortunately there was no reasoning with them. Mention guns to some people and you'd think you just grew horns or asked them to hunt baby seals.
Anyone else have any extreme reactions as a result of normal, responsible gun ownership or sportsmanship activities? It sort of makes you feel dizzy, and disoriented, when hunting and responsible defense of your family are viewed as aberrant and criminal behaviors. And this is in rural Vermont. What's it like in other states? It might help me deal with the total absurdity of it all to know what and how others are dealing with.
Bewildered in VT
Hastings
Twenty five years ago I was dating a woman who was a gifted artist. I felt like we hit it off on many levels, but one day after speaking to an old friend on the phone she asked me what we had talked about, not in an rude way, just curious. I explained that my friend and I had enjoyed shooting rifles and reloading, and we were reminiscing about those times. It was like I threw water in her face. She became hostile, insisted I get rid of any guns I might still have, and break off any associations with friends who shared this interest. I tried to reason with her, but from her perspective I had just become the antichrist.
Long story short, I explained that while guns were not more valuable to me than her, my experiences and friendships that had developed around hunting, skeet shooting, and the outdoor sporting lifestyle, were part of who I was and if she couldn't accept them she would not be happy with me for very long. End of relationship. I subsequently met and married my wife and mother of my three children, and couldn't be happier with the way things turned out.
Then, recently, my daughter (7years old at the time) developed a friendship with a classmate who lived a short distance away. Her parents are vegetarian, yoga practicing new age types. I have nothing against any of that, and was happy with the friendship my daughter had found. One day, the child's parents called to set up a play-date. My wife suggested an alternative day because we were going target shooting (as a family). The child's family immediately stated that their child was not allowed to come to our house and they were not comfortable with the relationship any longer. I tried to explain that our firearms were locked safely away, and we teach safe gun handling to our children, but that it was a multigenerational family tradition, not a terrorist activity. Unfortunately there was no reasoning with them. Mention guns to some people and you'd think you just grew horns or asked them to hunt baby seals.
Anyone else have any extreme reactions as a result of normal, responsible gun ownership or sportsmanship activities? It sort of makes you feel dizzy, and disoriented, when hunting and responsible defense of your family are viewed as aberrant and criminal behaviors. And this is in rural Vermont. What's it like in other states? It might help me deal with the total absurdity of it all to know what and how others are dealing with.
Bewildered in VT
Hastings
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