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Some people understood the main point of this thread.
Some actually brought something to the table (thank you DPB). But some folks didn't get it. For benefit of those who didn't get it, this wasn't about "training" as an option to enable "one" or "some" to prevail in this scenario as I indicated in the original post quoted below. Quote:
"Having a gun and thinking you are armed is like having a piano and thinking you are a musician". -- Col. Jeff Cooper (U.S.M.C. Ret.) It also involves recognizing ones limitations (re: DPB wrote: "... don't try to force a shot ...").
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Tony 412.310.7838 http://www.fireinstitute.org "... there's trained and untrained" (Denzel Washington -- Man on Fire) |
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Great points worthy of your avatar! Especially, the shot discipline issue. As citizens, independent of each other and having dinner with one's family, I believe the objective is to counter any threats against you. If you and yours are safe, then, if circumstances permit, it would be to act against the aggression. I don't think there is a fancy class or some "training" that is going to change that. Now, if I am working in a protection role, my course of action would be different, as would my required level of training. Be safe (and armed, you can always get training). Scott |
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No class, and no amount of training, is going to prepare you for every potential situation. And you can always get training, right up until you are involved in a violent encounter. Then, it's a "come as you are" war. What training will do is reduce the amount of attention you have to pay to the process of employing the firearm. Think of it like this: Your brain has a certain "bandwidth," for lack of a better turn. Everything your senses pick up and everything you do requires bandwidth. The untrained shooter will require most of his bandwidth to employ his weapon. Everyone has seen a new shooter work from the holster, where you can see the wheels turning in their head as they are thinking "I've got a gun - get my hand on the gun - pull the gun out of the holster - get the gun pointed in the right direction - get my other hand on the gun - find the sights (hopefully) - align the sights - find the trigger - press the trigger - assess what happened." By the time this shooter has worked through this, he has used up all of his bandwidth, and a lot of critical time. That's bandwidth that he could have been using for decision making. The trained shooter, upon determining that a shooting solution is required, will do these things with a very minimal usage of his/her bandwidth. Which leaves the rest of the bandwidth to asses whether shooting is really appropriate, where the "no shoots" are, what movement and communication options are available, etc. His/her mental processes are not consumed with the mechanical act of hitting the target with the projectile. Which allows his brain to process the parts of the situation he/she cannot control, and act/react accordingly. The best analogy is driving. When you are first learning to drive, your process is very much like the untrained individual (because that's what you are). Today, 95% of what you do on the road (for better or worse) you do without conscious thought. One other note, by training, I don't mean that you've done something a couple of times. I mean that you have done thousands of correct repititions, so that your hands move pretty much on their own. There are some equipment issues associated with this, but that's another topic. As I once heard an instructor say, "There are no advanced skills, you just do the basic stuff better." doug
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--Rob W. |
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