My biggest realization is when I didn't realize I already shot 6 times from my revolver, and my 7th trigger pull I essentially punched the air with my gun.
Yeah, revolvers or semiautos without a lock-back function showcase this pretty clearly. Revolvers also have the unfortunate side effect of showing I can't count rounds on the clock
Feel you. I started doing a dry fire after 4/5 shots if I feel something is off, it helps you figure out whats wrong and slow down the pace to better focus on technique.
@@Swordsman52 yeah this. def train with snap caps. all my friends sneak them into each others mags on the range and just wait for the worlds biggest dip. it's funny and good practice
I found it useful to consciously look through the shot, that is keep my eyes open during the discharge and after. I found when I was flinching I would blink with the flinch. If Im looking through the discharge and keeping my facial muscles relaxed i rarely flinch.
One thing that helped me was not to think about holding the gun still while shooting, but instead think of 'catching' the recoil and returning to the same position.
Don't even think about interacting with the recoil at all. The gun is going to kick. Focus on getting the sight back on target and your body will do it naturally after the kick. Ben Stoeger has probably the best videos on how to interact with the recoil impulse.
I absolutely don’t understand why u have just this amount of follower. You show a lot of useful tactical gear and fire arms. I like ur video quality a lot and the fact that u don’t threat weapons like toys. And u are one of the only channels that doesn’t seem sponsored by Trump Keep it up ☺️
It's really interesting to see how this can change from session to session, too. A lot of the time it seems that overthinking and / or focusing on the wrong thing can take away years of practice - but only temporarily. I tend to live in flinch city on the range, but shot on the clock for the first time this past weekend and was surprisingly solid, if admittedly very much a D-tier shooter. Still need to practice a lot more, of course!
this is awesome! i’ve been shooting all my life but recently been plagued with not being able to NOT flinch anytime i shoot .380 and above because of recent anxieties, love these tips!
Definitely recommend the snap cap route of training. My dad utilized it to get me used to his .41 magnum revolver and it kept me at ease when firing it.
Thank you for addressing this! Can't wait to try these tips. New firearm owner here and I still hate the things but need to learn to use them properly. Please please open a range or travel vlog around showing us awkward baby giraffes how to be less scared and wobbly around firearms. Oh, and your eyes are EVERYTHING!
@@Mangoré1885 It makes sense. Both can be true at the same time. It's necessary to learn to use guns, but I still hate them. I hate holding them. I hate how heavy they are. I hate how my wrist hurts after practice.I hate that sometimes sparks fly out and burn my hands. I don't like gripping them or having to steady myself mentally and physically for 10 minutes before firing. The knots they put in my stomach. The anxiety caused by the real possibility of actually having to fire the thing in actual self-defense. They are loud and stinky. I hate that a simple mistake could cost my life or someone else's. I hate the finality of having to use a gun against people who have tried to take my life that should have been in a treatment center or housing facility, and that a gun was my best defense against a situation that shouldn't even exist in this country. I could go on and on....owning guns doesn't mean I love them or like them at all.
@@Mangoré1885 We're not actually disagreeing. Their loudness, stinkiness and tendency to burn me have nothing to do with a utopian vision, but rather the actual gun itself, which is a different issue. I hate guns as they exist (loud, stinky, burning, no room for mistakes), and I hate that I have to own them, both of these things are true.
@@Mangoré1885 What's cringe is how you are arguing with yourself or some imaginary "leftist" you know and hate, while pretending it's a response to me. I hate guns yet I carry because it's necessary; continue missing that crucial point so we can argue some more, please. Fear of inanimate objects? Stop projecting. All those "cringe" reasons you ignore. I hate guns and own them, get over it.
@@Mangoré1885 what a weird comment Do you have to enjoy fighting as a prerequisite to learning unarmed self defense? Personally I fucking love shooting, but someone doesn’t have to enjoy using guns in order to train with them. Someone can find the experience of shooting thoroughly unpleasant but still understand the necessity of training.
Best “as-it-happens” EXPLANATION I have heard; not that U need my agreement but U covered the situation very WELL ! And it is a “thing” of and about the MONKEY gray matter.
The first day I ever shot a pistol I kept firing low and, without me knowing, the instructor put a snap cap in and I saw that dip of the gun. It was super effective at showing what I needed to correct.
Not to derail the comments but something about the font in the thumbnail made me read it as "how to stop fucking while shooting" and I think that would be a very interesting video tbh
The human brain doesn’t usually like something going bang two feet in front of your face. Further, our brain thinks that since the gun going bang is a sudden, violent action then making it go bang should also be a sudden, violent action. So we yank and jerk and squeeze the grip and punch the air with the gun, instead of smoothly pressing the trigger. How can you tell how bad your flinch is? Invest in some dummy rounds and randomly load live and dummies so you don’t know what’s going to happen when you press that trigger. When you get that surprise click instead of bang, see what you’re doing. All that movement of the gun is what your doing when you live fire too. How to fix it? First thing’s first, inoculate yourself to the bang by firing many, many rounds without overly concerning yourself with perfecting your marksmanship yet. Still pay attention to the fundamentals to build good habits, but the purpose of this training session is to get used to the bang and recoil, and get over any nervousness you might have about it. Once you find yourself not reacting to the recoil, physically or psychologically, then you can begin to refine and drill down those marksmanship skills. It’s an investment of a few hundred rounds, but very worth it. And if you’ve been away from live fire practice for a while, your first magazine or so should be this drill. Don’t worry about accuracy too much yet, just re-inoculate yourself to the firecracker going off in front of you. Just some advice from an old firearms trainer.
An alternative I like to do that doesn't require dummy rounds, is to put the magazine in, chamber a round, and drop the magazine. First shot is live, second is "dry fire." And if you're already having a flinching problem, I pretty much promise you'll see it on that second "dry fire" shot. Then I put the mag back in, chamber another round, drop the mag, and repeat until my flinch on the "dry fire" round goes away. 🙂
that minimal hold with the pinky out was funnier than it needed to be. _"NO SPONGEBOB, NO NO NO! PINKY! PINKY!!_ Shooting rifles helped me overcome flinching personally. pistols were difficult, but good training and a good instructor helps bunches.
if using iron sights and shooting low it might be trying to see target or check impact instead of focus on front sight and follow through, natural tendency is to look for target-which is overlayed by front sight so drop sight down to see target but now aiming low. Might try for 6 o'clock aim, it target is round you'd aim at the bottom of target thereby allowing to see target(this works best for bullseye target shooting where the distance to target doesn't change so gun can be zeroed so when aiming at 6 o'clock the impact is the bullseye, most practical guns are zeroed so sights Point of aim,POA, is the same as point of impact, POI, since distances vary)
Have a friend load a few dummy rounds into your mag before you shoot to see if it is a problem for you. This response eventually goes away as you become comfortable with the violent noise and feel of a handgun going off in your presence. Focus on consistent and steady trigger pulls, as you said, even and steadily increasing pressure. Targets tell the story. Good stuff here
A neat trick I discovered to help with flinching. Step 1 shoot 9mm for a couple shots. Step 2 shoot 6 .44 mags Step 3. Pick the 9 back up. All of a sudden the 9 is almost nothing.
when i was a teen, that's what my insructor trained me with. but with a revolver, he was not putting all bullet in the cylinder, and then make me shoot it to overcome the flinch response, it was very weird at first, but helped me a lot
I flinched pretty bad, when I was in bootcamp my PMI had me squeeze the trigger ridiculously slow for a few shots. I basically had no idea when the shot would come and he told me to look at the target and keep your eyes open while I was doing that. It didn't take long for me to stop flinching because I was a new shooter but it might take a lot longer for people that have flinched for a long time and just not noticed it
A good method I've heard to train for this is to; take up some slack to the trigger and get it near the wall.. Then slowly add little by little until you get just before the break. If you start feeling anticipation of it firing, wait for it to pass. Then try to get it even closer to the break. Eventually it might fire before you think, effectively throwing off your anticipation.
keep arms close to body for support, sometimes action shooters pull back on support hand into shoulder and use shooting hand as fulcrum to push forward/up, otherwise slings are great as well as bringing gun down a bit then up again, allowing some muscle activity rather than locked in, expect like 5 seconds to aim and shoot then down again.
Focus more on pulling the gun into your shoulder with your support hand. It's easier to overcome due to being 4 points of contact (two hands, cheek, shoulder) on a rifle vs a pistol using two hands only. Pulling the rifle into your body is kinda like a big deadweight to aleviate strain from trying to hold still etc.
This is why in the 2A community we constantly say "slow squeeze, let it suprise you" don't anticipate, don't try to control the recoil with movement, let the grip do the work for you.
Try using small light weight revolver, like an LCR. Shoot 5 rounds, then unload one empty shell, and load a single cartridge. Close your eyes, spin the cylinder, and close it. Now you won't know with which trigger pull it's going to fire. Do this for 4 or 5 single rounds, or until you stop flinching. Then take out 2 empty cases, and load 2 cartridges, spin and close as before. Cycle through until both rounds have fired. Do two rounds several times. Now unload all but 1 empty case, and load the rest with fresh cartridges. Now there's a good chance after 2 or 3 shots you might start flinching again. If so, it will show when you hit the empty one.
Flinching doesn't have necessarily need to be about the shot or recoil but the loud noise alone. Especially at indoor ranges someone in the bay next to you with a short barrel pistol or magnum revolver might make one flinch. The easiest is to have less of the noise with high dB reduction ear protection and if indoor, double up. If possible it may also help to train sound sensitive ones with less noisy firearms that are also heavy helping with perceived recoil. During the shooting, just focusing on something else like the grip itself can avoid the response. Be aware that a flinch can come around after years after like a training pause or some scary event that took place on the range like an injury or a falling pistol firing.
This kind of video is exactly why I subbed your channel and became a Patreon supporter (via another name). Do you have a video that directly addresses support hand grip? That's my downfall, and it's exacerbated by arthritis in that hand that make a hard grip painful and a small gun (basically a 3/4 size 1911-yeah, it was a stupid purchase as a sole handgun).
I do have my fundamentals of pistol shooting video: ruclips.net/video/vhDjwguE2uo/видео.html But basically, give it as much support-hand grip as you possibly can.
Sometimes I think about picking up shooting as a hobby but if im being real I clutch my pearls at the thought of buying 7 charcoal dollar pencil and 5 dollar pens for drawing so seeing the price range for a gun would probably give me a heart attack
Since I have no friends, I used a revolver to do that dummy trick. I would randomly spin the cylinder between each shot so I never knew when the live round was going to go off.
You might consider trying the Mantis X. It helps analyze what your doing wrong. Works with live and dry fire. Also gives draw analysis. It’s a little pricey but it’s help me quite a lot.
If you get the flinches during a range session: Chamber a round, remove the magazine, shoot a "double". You'll see/feel the gun dip on that second trigger pull (which will be dry). Then put the mag back in, chamber a round, remove mag. Repeat. This is like the dummy-round mag drill except you can do it as needed in the middle of a trip, even without dummy rounds! Good luck battling the flinch.
thing about this is, you would KNOW the next "round" which isn't there, is going to be a click and not bang, so your brain will already tell your body to relax and maybe not take it as seriously as when you mix snap caps with live rounds in a mag
@@StevenL00 Yep! It works great, dunno why I still flinch but I still do. I have about 20k rounds through the same pistol (I'm on my 3rd recoil spring). I know that gun, I know how it shoots, I know what it feels like...and I'll still get flinches. The drill reminds me it's just my brain playing a trick, and it keeps me honest.
“Don’t be a pansy” is worthless advice but “just shoot more” is unironically part of the solution. The more experience you have with shooting the more acclimated you get to gunfire, and the less you flinch.
@@PigPharmaceuticals for getting used to the bang, for sure, but also to be fair practice doesn't make perfect, it makes permanent. It's definitely easy to pick up training scars without good instruction.
having a camera film it from side might show what to improve on, either use a tripod to film self or have friend film, some shooters wear a go pro on their cap and can show the gun,target view
Totally forgot about it. You make very professional videos which take a lot of time when u need someone to cut your videos. Reach out to possible sponsors or test material, or just building a website. Just write me I would love to help to increase the consistency of uploads so u will get more subs and clicks :)
My biggest realization is when I didn't realize I already shot 6 times from my revolver, and my 7th trigger pull I essentially punched the air with my gun.
Yeah that and practice caps are a good way to notice it
Yeah, revolvers or semiautos without a lock-back function showcase this pretty clearly. Revolvers also have the unfortunate side effect of showing I can't count rounds on the clock
Feel you. I started doing a dry fire after 4/5 shots if I feel something is off, it helps you figure out whats wrong and slow down the pace to better focus on technique.
@@hunterd8617 Ya, we should probably go back and watch some Sesame Street to learn how to count our shots :)
@@Swordsman52 yeah this. def train with snap caps. all my friends sneak them into each others mags on the range and just wait for the worlds biggest dip. it's funny and good practice
I found it useful to consciously look through the shot, that is keep my eyes open during the discharge and after. I found when I was flinching I would blink with the flinch. If Im looking through the discharge and keeping my facial muscles relaxed i rarely flinch.
That's biofeedback, isn't it. Sounds like an outstanding technique.
One thing that helped me was not to think about holding the gun still while shooting, but instead think of 'catching' the recoil and returning to the same position.
Don't even think about interacting with the recoil at all. The gun is going to kick. Focus on getting the sight back on target and your body will do it naturally after the kick. Ben Stoeger has probably the best videos on how to interact with the recoil impulse.
I absolutely don’t understand why u have just this amount of follower. You show a lot of useful tactical gear and fire arms. I like ur video quality a lot and the fact that u don’t threat weapons like toys. And u are one of the only channels that doesn’t seem sponsored by Trump
Keep it up ☺️
We have to help by sharing the videos. That should help grow the channel and get her more subs.
It's really interesting to see how this can change from session to session, too. A lot of the time it seems that overthinking and / or focusing on the wrong thing can take away years of practice - but only temporarily.
I tend to live in flinch city on the range, but shot on the clock for the first time this past weekend and was surprisingly solid, if admittedly very much a D-tier shooter. Still need to practice a lot more, of course!
this is awesome! i’ve been shooting all my life but recently been plagued with not being able to NOT flinch anytime i shoot .380 and above because of recent anxieties, love these tips!
Definitely recommend the snap cap route of training. My dad utilized it to get me used to his .41 magnum revolver and it kept me at ease when firing it.
Thanks Girlfriend! This was a detailed description of what, when and how to recover from every shooters worst friend the flinch..
Thank you for addressing this! Can't wait to try these tips. New firearm owner here and I still hate the things but need to learn to use them properly. Please please open a range or travel vlog around showing us awkward baby giraffes how to be less scared and wobbly around firearms. Oh, and your eyes are EVERYTHING!
@@Mangoré1885 It makes sense. Both can be true at the same time. It's necessary to learn to use guns, but I still hate them. I hate holding them. I hate how heavy they are. I hate how my wrist hurts after practice.I hate that sometimes sparks fly out and burn my hands. I don't like gripping them or having to steady myself mentally and physically for 10 minutes before firing. The knots they put in my stomach. The anxiety caused by the real possibility of actually having to fire the thing in actual self-defense. They are loud and stinky. I hate that a simple mistake could cost my life or someone else's. I hate the finality of having to use a gun against people who have tried to take my life that should have been in a treatment center or housing facility, and that a gun was my best defense against a situation that shouldn't even exist in this country. I could go on and on....owning guns doesn't mean I love them or like them at all.
@@Mangoré1885 We're not actually disagreeing. Their loudness, stinkiness and tendency to burn me have nothing to do with a utopian vision, but rather the actual gun itself, which is a different issue. I hate guns as they exist (loud, stinky, burning, no room for mistakes), and I hate that I have to own them, both of these things are true.
@@Mangoré1885 What's cringe is how you are arguing with yourself or some imaginary "leftist" you know and hate, while pretending it's a response to me. I hate guns yet I carry because it's necessary; continue missing that crucial point so we can argue some more, please. Fear of inanimate objects? Stop projecting. All those "cringe" reasons you ignore. I hate guns and own them, get over it.
@@Mangoré1885 what a weird comment
Do you have to enjoy fighting as a prerequisite to learning unarmed self defense? Personally I fucking love shooting, but someone doesn’t have to enjoy using guns in order to train with them. Someone can find the experience of shooting thoroughly unpleasant but still understand the necessity of training.
@@Mangoré1885 Interesting channel on which to insult a stranger by calling them a fairy.
Best “as-it-happens” EXPLANATION I have heard; not that U need my agreement but U covered the situation very WELL !
And it is a “thing” of and about the MONKEY gray matter.
thank you for serving looks in every video
The first day I ever shot a pistol I kept firing low and, without me knowing, the instructor put a snap cap in and I saw that dip of the gun. It was super effective at showing what I needed to correct.
Love the randomized snap-cap w/live ammo suggestion. Great idea!
Not to derail the comments but something about the font in the thumbnail made me read it as "how to stop fucking while shooting" and I think that would be a very interesting video tbh
Also thanks for putting the songs at the end of the video! 💜💙
The human brain doesn’t usually like something going bang two feet in front of your face.
Further, our brain thinks that since the gun going bang is a sudden, violent action then making it go bang should also be a sudden, violent action. So we yank and jerk and squeeze the grip and punch the air with the gun, instead of smoothly pressing the trigger.
How can you tell how bad your flinch is? Invest in some dummy rounds and randomly load live and dummies so you don’t know what’s going to happen when you press that trigger. When you get that surprise click instead of bang, see what you’re doing. All that movement of the gun is what your doing when you live fire too.
How to fix it? First thing’s first, inoculate yourself to the bang by firing many, many rounds without overly concerning yourself with perfecting your marksmanship yet. Still pay attention to the fundamentals to build good habits, but the purpose of this training session is to get used to the bang and recoil, and get over any nervousness you might have about it.
Once you find yourself not reacting to the recoil, physically or psychologically, then you can begin to refine and drill down those marksmanship skills.
It’s an investment of a few hundred rounds, but very worth it. And if you’ve been away from live fire practice for a while, your first magazine or so should be this drill. Don’t worry about accuracy too much yet, just re-inoculate yourself to the firecracker going off in front of you.
Just some advice from an old firearms trainer.
An alternative I like to do that doesn't require dummy rounds, is to put the magazine in, chamber a round, and drop the magazine. First shot is live, second is "dry fire." And if you're already having a flinching problem, I pretty much promise you'll see it on that second "dry fire" shot. Then I put the mag back in, chamber another round, drop the mag, and repeat until my flinch on the "dry fire" round goes away. 🙂
This is me. I'm a mad flincher. My friend racked my slide without putting a round in a chamber. Soon as I pulled the trigger...the gun would dip.
Love the synthwave/cyberpunk/goth A E S T H E T I C of these videos.
that minimal hold with the pinky out was funnier than it needed to be.
_"NO SPONGEBOB, NO NO NO! PINKY! PINKY!!_
Shooting rifles helped me overcome flinching personally. pistols were difficult, but good training and a good instructor helps bunches.
thankyou! this is good advice. I notice i often seem to shoot "lower" then where I intend and i've been trying to figure out what to change.
if using iron sights and shooting low it might be trying to see target or check impact instead of focus on front sight and follow through, natural tendency is to look for target-which is overlayed by front sight so drop sight down to see target but now aiming low. Might try for 6 o'clock aim, it target is round you'd aim at the bottom of target thereby allowing to see target(this works best for bullseye target shooting where the distance to target doesn't change so gun can be zeroed so when aiming at 6 o'clock the impact is the bullseye, most practical guns are zeroed so sights Point of aim,POA, is the same as point of impact, POI, since distances vary)
Have a friend load a few dummy rounds into your mag before you shoot to see if it is a problem for you.
This response eventually goes away as you become comfortable with the violent noise and feel of a handgun going off in your presence.
Focus on consistent and steady trigger pulls, as you said, even and steadily increasing pressure.
Targets tell the story. Good stuff here
I posted this comment before the video was over. You're tracking properly 👍
What's a "friend"?
@@linkbond08 a shooting buddy. Or load your mags with your eyes closed I don't know
A neat trick I discovered to help with flinching. Step 1 shoot 9mm for a couple shots.
Step 2 shoot 6 .44 mags
Step 3. Pick the 9 back up.
All of a sudden the 9 is almost nothing.
hope yall are listening she knows what she's talking about 😍
well done.
random but i rly enjoyed the background music
Good advice, thanks.
With the snapcap thing, shouldn't we use hangfire safety rules? It was PROBABLY a cap, but you don't know that.
That's a good point. Especially if you're using reloads. You could and should be training an SOP for hangfire while using a snapcap to test flinch
The snap cap idea is brilliant.
Always excited to see a new video! Thanks!
when i was a teen, that's what my insructor trained me with. but with a revolver, he was not putting all bullet in the cylinder, and then make me shoot it to overcome the flinch response, it was very weird at first, but helped me a lot
I flinched pretty bad, when I was in bootcamp my PMI had me squeeze the trigger ridiculously slow for a few shots. I basically had no idea when the shot would come and he told me to look at the target and keep your eyes open while I was doing that. It didn't take long for me to stop flinching because I was a new shooter but it might take a lot longer for people that have flinched for a long time and just not noticed it
Everything you do is awesome. Thank you
A good method I've heard to train for this is to; take up some slack to the trigger and get it near the wall.. Then slowly add little by little until you get just before the break. If you start feeling anticipation of it firing, wait for it to pass. Then try to get it even closer to the break. Eventually it might fire before you think, effectively throwing off your anticipation.
Very informative.. now I just have to buy some snap caps.. Any thoughts on shaky hands when holding a rifle?
keep arms close to body for support, sometimes action shooters pull back on support hand into shoulder and use shooting hand as fulcrum to push forward/up, otherwise slings are great as well as bringing gun down a bit then up again, allowing some muscle activity rather than locked in, expect like 5 seconds to aim and shoot then down again.
Focus more on pulling the gun into your shoulder with your support hand. It's easier to overcome due to being 4 points of contact (two hands, cheek, shoulder) on a rifle vs a pistol using two hands only. Pulling the rifle into your body is kinda like a big deadweight to aleviate strain from trying to hold still etc.
Hey TG, do you run oem trigger in your pistol? If not, what do you run?
I've recently put an Overwatch Precision trigger in this P10C.
btw, that shirt is sweet
and the eyes really 'pop' when you blink! You always have the best makeup but seems even better! Reviewed some other vids, I think it's the bangs!
This is why in the 2A community we constantly say "slow squeeze, let it suprise you" don't anticipate, don't try to control the recoil with movement, let the grip do the work for you.
Try using small light weight revolver, like an LCR. Shoot 5 rounds, then unload one empty shell, and load a single cartridge. Close your eyes, spin the cylinder, and close it. Now you won't know with which trigger pull it's going to fire. Do this for 4 or 5 single rounds, or until you stop flinching. Then take out 2 empty cases, and load 2 cartridges, spin and close as before. Cycle through until both rounds have fired. Do two rounds several times. Now unload all but 1 empty case, and load the rest with fresh cartridges. Now there's a good chance after 2 or 3 shots you might start flinching again. If so, it will show when you hit the empty one.
Flinching doesn't have necessarily need to be about the shot or recoil but the loud noise alone. Especially at indoor ranges someone in the bay next to you with a short barrel pistol or magnum revolver might make one flinch. The easiest is to have less of the noise with high dB reduction ear protection and if indoor, double up. If possible it may also help to train sound sensitive ones with less noisy firearms that are also heavy helping with perceived recoil.
During the shooting, just focusing on something else like the grip itself can avoid the response. Be aware that a flinch can come around after years after like a training pause or some scary event that took place on the range like an injury or a falling pistol firing.
Oh yes! This one's very important and the reason pistols are hard to get good at
Well throughout and presented. BZ TGF!
shoot a bunch of 308 out of a bolt action and 12 gauge slugs from a pump shotgun and you'll never notice 9mm recoil again. helped me
Thank you girlfriend!
@@patriotverybased3905 noooooo, that’s tacticool girlfriend!!
@@smolsnek3835 me already know dat
This kind of video is exactly why I subbed your channel and became a Patreon supporter (via another name).
Do you have a video that directly addresses support hand grip? That's my downfall, and it's exacerbated by arthritis in that hand that make a hard grip painful and a small gun (basically a 3/4 size 1911-yeah, it was a stupid purchase as a sole handgun).
I do have my fundamentals of pistol shooting video: ruclips.net/video/vhDjwguE2uo/видео.html
But basically, give it as much support-hand grip as you possibly can.
I'm glad to see hop is finally embracing his real self.
Sometimes I think about picking up shooting as a hobby but if im being real I clutch my pearls at the thought of buying 7 charcoal dollar pencil and 5 dollar pens for drawing so seeing the price range for a gun would probably give me a heart attack
Pens and pencils are consumables, a gun isn’t - or at least, a quality gun isn’t. You buy once, you cry once.
solid advice. can you do one where you show different dry fire drills using snapcaps?
is your necklace charm a labrys? love it!
You're probably point and head of each fucking stack!.. Outstanding Channel. Save some for the rest of us.
Since I have no friends, I used a revolver to do that dummy trick. I would randomly spin the cylinder between each shot so I never knew when the live round was going to go off.
You might consider trying the Mantis X. It helps analyze what your doing wrong. Works with live and dry fire. Also gives draw analysis. It’s a little pricey but it’s help me quite a lot.
❤️🧡💛💚💙💜🖤
The background music sounds great sped up to 1.5.
"The trick is to hear silence in your mind at the bang"
Tactical cool girlfriend. Bravo you get a sub.
Ok cool!
Cool!
If you get the flinches during a range session: Chamber a round, remove the magazine, shoot a "double".
You'll see/feel the gun dip on that second trigger pull (which will be dry). Then put the mag back in, chamber a round, remove mag. Repeat. This is like the dummy-round mag drill except you can do it as needed in the middle of a trip, even without dummy rounds! Good luck battling the flinch.
thing about this is, you would KNOW the next "round" which isn't there, is going to be a click and not bang, so your brain will already tell your body to relax and maybe not take it as seriously as when you mix snap caps with live rounds in a mag
@@StevenL00 oh my sweet summer child. It doesn’t work that way. Try it 😁
@@ezridiol oh wait you mean just chamber a round drop the mag and simply double tap away? Ok i think i see what you mean now, good idea!
@@StevenL00 Yep! It works great, dunno why I still flinch but I still do. I have about 20k rounds through the same pistol (I'm on my 3rd recoil spring). I know that gun, I know how it shoots, I know what it feels like...and I'll still get flinches.
The drill reminds me it's just my brain playing a trick, and it keeps me honest.
I'm a doomer too.
I always love the bisexual lighting
While the boop count did not increase, I bet a lot of flinches decreased. This almost makes up for the lack of boops!
I don't flinch, maybe I'm just awesome. But now that you mentioned it I probably will. 🙄
🔥
In short: the difference between a flinch and active recoil control, is timing.
Ready to see "just shoot more lmao" "just don't be a pansy" etc down here in the comments
Just shoot more, also quit being a pansy.
“Don’t be a pansy” is worthless advice but “just shoot more” is unironically part of the solution. The more experience you have with shooting the more acclimated you get to gunfire, and the less you flinch.
Now I just need a video on how to get my monkey paw out of this jar but still hold onto the candy, my monkey brain just keeps saying 'CANDY'
@@PigPharmaceuticals for getting used to the bang, for sure, but also to be fair practice doesn't make perfect, it makes permanent. It's definitely easy to pick up training scars without good instruction.
👍👍
more than life itself
Flinching or anticipation?
You look like a modded fallout 4 character.
That's not a bad thing tho.
Premature g-flinchulation. :D
time and technique can fix all of that in my experience
having a camera film it from side might show what to improve on, either use a tripod to film self or have friend film, some shooters wear a go pro on their cap and can show the gun,target view
Are you going to make airsoft content, too?
Ohh is that the lesbian labrys ?! 💖💖💖💖
Ahh now I understand the mask
just be honest with your self when your shooting.
Totally forgot about it. You make very professional videos which take a lot of time when u need someone to cut your videos. Reach out to possible sponsors or test material, or just building a website. Just write me I would love to help to increase the consistency of uploads so u will get more subs and clicks :)
Seems like u have a problem with a bot in your comments
Where did you come from? Are you an alien shooter?
“ Explosion in your hands”. Freudian female slip?
No, but you just posted a common male Freudian slip.
That's not what that means 💀
Administrative results needs to do a collab with you.
the rhodesian apartheid fetishist?
Administrative results gives the vibe of being an actively unsafe person for someone like Tacticool GF to be around
@@smolsnek3835 he openly praises the colonial apartheid state of rhodesia, and has repeatedly made transphobic jokes
Mask?? I can't hear very after many years of shooting and just getting old. This video has very muffled audio to me. Don't get the mask...
I felt like after 25 yrs old it's too late. Young youth comp shooters never flinch when taught Early
Cool and helpful video, thx 💥👊😎