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Competition, Tactics & Training
Firearm Training
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<blockquote data-quote="Jgibs0321" data-source="post: 3761046" data-attributes="member: 49409"><p>Yep. Just because you once had a skillset doesnt mean you still have it now. Importance of never stop working and training. You will find out what you really know when the real deal takes placei</p><p></p><p>Its not that one should spend excess time pretending they belong to a small team or fireteam even, but there are absolutely skills learned from small team environments that will take you far beyond the average joe. It isnt even advanced concepts, as far as Im concerned it is all basic. Shooting is shooting, moving is moving, and paying attention, responding, and adaptation is just a part of how all men and women should live! As stated above, I work everything I can when I can. I work drawing my pistol, knife, from a concealed holster as well as a “battle belt”. In kit and in plain clothes. High emphasis on first round hits and the best recoil management possible, one handed (strong only and support hand only) two handed (primary hand strong and support hand as the strong hand), from 3-50 yards. Occasionally I will push out to 75 just to remind myself it is possible. Not pretty but doable. Dark parking lot, dark room, dark anything, its all the same, so lowlight shooting and lowlight clearing and target ID is all apart of my normal training. Do a lot of it on a daily basis. A ton of dry fire also. Dry mechanics to the point the wife is asking me to go somewhere else <img class="smilie smilie--emoji" loading="lazy" alt="😂" title="😂" src="https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/joypixels/assets/8.0/png/unicode/64/1f602.png" />. The average person will always be average unless they choose to work to be above average. I agree, limited time and a busy culture in America, so people have to figure out just what is really important to them. And yes I have a family so Im not 18 and single in my moms basement.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Jgibs0321, post: 3761046, member: 49409"] Yep. Just because you once had a skillset doesnt mean you still have it now. Importance of never stop working and training. You will find out what you really know when the real deal takes placei Its not that one should spend excess time pretending they belong to a small team or fireteam even, but there are absolutely skills learned from small team environments that will take you far beyond the average joe. It isnt even advanced concepts, as far as Im concerned it is all basic. Shooting is shooting, moving is moving, and paying attention, responding, and adaptation is just a part of how all men and women should live! As stated above, I work everything I can when I can. I work drawing my pistol, knife, from a concealed holster as well as a “battle belt”. In kit and in plain clothes. High emphasis on first round hits and the best recoil management possible, one handed (strong only and support hand only) two handed (primary hand strong and support hand as the strong hand), from 3-50 yards. Occasionally I will push out to 75 just to remind myself it is possible. Not pretty but doable. Dark parking lot, dark room, dark anything, its all the same, so lowlight shooting and lowlight clearing and target ID is all apart of my normal training. Do a lot of it on a daily basis. A ton of dry fire also. Dry mechanics to the point the wife is asking me to go somewhere else 😂. The average person will always be average unless they choose to work to be above average. I agree, limited time and a busy culture in America, so people have to figure out just what is really important to them. And yes I have a family so Im not 18 and single in my moms basement. [/QUOTE]
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