It absolutely blows my mind that people carrying guns are not training this. I think there is a false sense of security that develops when one takes a gun class and they can draw fast when the timer goes. I don't use them. Once my students can draw the gun from concealment, i begin focusing on doing that while moving.
100! And, something to consider, the latest research in motor learning suggests that the best way to maximize the transference of motor skills is for skill development and skill acquisition to happen at the same time. Hope that helps a little. Thanks for the comment.
I think that people get a false sense of security from having a gun on....period! Too many people get caught up worrying about guns, calibers, and loads (raises hand here) and forget that tactics have to meet the occasion. And I wish more people would "war game" in the sense of asking themselves "What would I do if?" From what I read that you guys are saying, all that stuff is vastly more important that "whether I carry a 9mm or a .45"
It would be nice to see practice with a dummy knife and a dummy gun that can realistically holster. Maybe a squirtgun made with realistic size and weight. This is definitely a good thing to teach.
It absolutely blows my mind that people carrying guns are not training this. I think there is a false sense of security that develops when one takes a gun class and they can draw fast when the timer goes. I don't use them. Once my students can draw the gun from concealment, i begin focusing on doing that while moving.
100! And, something to consider, the latest research in motor learning suggests that the best way to maximize the transference of motor skills is for skill development and skill acquisition to happen at the same time. Hope that helps a little. Thanks for the comment.
@@integrativedefensestrategi8272 do you have a link to such studies? Thanks
I think that people get a false sense of security from having a gun on....period! Too many people get caught up worrying about guns, calibers, and loads (raises hand here) and forget that tactics have to meet the occasion. And I wish more people would "war game" in the sense of asking themselves "What would I do if?" From what I read that you guys are saying, all that stuff is vastly more important that "whether I carry a 9mm or a .45"
@@TwoWeekCowboy 100!
It would be nice to see practice with a dummy knife and a dummy gun that can realistically holster. Maybe a squirtgun made with realistic size and weight. This is definitely a good thing to teach.