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<blockquote data-quote="tacmedic" data-source="post: 59749" data-attributes="member: 578"><p>THIS IS A COPY OF MY POSTING ON TDSA's SITE:</p><p></p><p>This weekend my wife and I attended TDSA's urban rifle course for the first time and I am still buzzing from the adrenaline...wide eye, slack jawed, and absolutely dumbfounded at how much we learned and how much we improved in our skills with a rifle. The instructors at TDSA are AMAZING!!! </p><p></p><p>My wife had never fired an M4/AR before. Now she can make ALL her hits from any range or position of her choosing to gain the tactical advantage. Standing, kneeling, prone, modified prone, scuba prone, right or left handed doesn't matter she'll nail you. I am so incredibly proud of her. </p><p></p><p>They had me shooting better with my left (formerly untrained side) than I could with my right side before taking this course. In one weekend they taught me more about manipulating and employing my rifle than I learned in 10 years of military experience (9 of them in Special Operations) and two years as a reserve deputy and SWAT Paramedic. NO LIE! </p><p></p><p>Every student out there got personal one on one teaching from all five of the instructors who were able to immediately diagnose and correct any errors made by the students. Each student was also pushed to their personal limits and well beyond. Students were never compared or contrasted against one another and instructors were generous with praise for a job well done. The excitement for their student's growth and improvement was genuine and their attitude and professionalism was absolutely contagious. This caused the students to rapidly form a very positive cohesive bond. It was incredible to watch, if one student yelled RED he was immediately covered by another student and usually more than one without any prompting by instructors. Students coached, supported, and praised each other even offering constructive criticism without anyone ever feeling embarrassed or ashamed. I have seen groups who have trained together for years who were not so supportive of each other. </p><p> </p><p></p><p>Safety was the number one priority and out of such a large group of shooters there was not a single safety violation. Because of the atmosphere the instructors created and out the students respect for the instructors and one another there was never a single solitary second of lax muzzle discipline. </p><p></p><p>As TDSA joins with USSA I am both excited for the future and a little sad to see TDSA as I have come to know it go away. But I will tell you this, I don't care what name they go by or the specifics of their geographical location my family and I will continue to train with Marshall, Eric, Billy, Patty, and Travis so long as they are willing to teach.</p><p></p><p>USSA, you’re getting one hell of a group of instructors who are gifted shooters, gifted teachers, talented and motivational leaders, as well as moral role models. Our indebtedness, respect, trust, and loyalty lies with each of them individually and not to any organization or affiliation.</p><p></p><p>With our utmost gratitude,</p><p></p><p>Jeff & W.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="tacmedic, post: 59749, member: 578"] THIS IS A COPY OF MY POSTING ON TDSA's SITE: This weekend my wife and I attended TDSA's urban rifle course for the first time and I am still buzzing from the adrenaline...wide eye, slack jawed, and absolutely dumbfounded at how much we learned and how much we improved in our skills with a rifle. The instructors at TDSA are AMAZING!!! My wife had never fired an M4/AR before. Now she can make ALL her hits from any range or position of her choosing to gain the tactical advantage. Standing, kneeling, prone, modified prone, scuba prone, right or left handed doesn't matter she'll nail you. I am so incredibly proud of her. They had me shooting better with my left (formerly untrained side) than I could with my right side before taking this course. In one weekend they taught me more about manipulating and employing my rifle than I learned in 10 years of military experience (9 of them in Special Operations) and two years as a reserve deputy and SWAT Paramedic. NO LIE! Every student out there got personal one on one teaching from all five of the instructors who were able to immediately diagnose and correct any errors made by the students. Each student was also pushed to their personal limits and well beyond. Students were never compared or contrasted against one another and instructors were generous with praise for a job well done. The excitement for their student's growth and improvement was genuine and their attitude and professionalism was absolutely contagious. This caused the students to rapidly form a very positive cohesive bond. It was incredible to watch, if one student yelled RED he was immediately covered by another student and usually more than one without any prompting by instructors. Students coached, supported, and praised each other even offering constructive criticism without anyone ever feeling embarrassed or ashamed. I have seen groups who have trained together for years who were not so supportive of each other. Safety was the number one priority and out of such a large group of shooters there was not a single safety violation. Because of the atmosphere the instructors created and out the students respect for the instructors and one another there was never a single solitary second of lax muzzle discipline. As TDSA joins with USSA I am both excited for the future and a little sad to see TDSA as I have come to know it go away. But I will tell you this, I don't care what name they go by or the specifics of their geographical location my family and I will continue to train with Marshall, Eric, Billy, Patty, and Travis so long as they are willing to teach. USSA, you’re getting one hell of a group of instructors who are gifted shooters, gifted teachers, talented and motivational leaders, as well as moral role models. Our indebtedness, respect, trust, and loyalty lies with each of them individually and not to any organization or affiliation. With our utmost gratitude, Jeff & W. [/QUOTE]
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