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A Deep Dive into Firearms Training

Gentleman at outdoor range first a semi-automatic pistolPin

Overview

Season 2, Episode 14

In this installment, we reunite with Van Seeley, a seasoned Marine Corps veteran and firearms instructor, to delve into the critical aspects of gun training.

Join us as Van shares his journey from the high-stakes world of force recon to imparting essential firearms skills to civilians. He reveals the challenges of transitioning from training elite special operations units to teaching everyday people, emphasizing the importance of mastering the basics before diving into advanced techniques.

Discover why training is indispensable for anyone looking to handle firearms, especially for defensive purposes. Van discusses the key elements of a good training program, the importance of proper preparation, and the pitfalls to avoid as a student. Whether you’re a novice or an experienced shooter, this episode is packed with insights that will help you elevate your skills and ensure safety on the range.

Tune in to hear about the philosophies that drive effective training, the common mistakes students make, and what to look for when seeking quality instruction. This episode is a treasure trove of knowledge for anyone serious about improving their firearms proficiency.

Transcript

View Podcast Transcript

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Music.

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Hello and welcome to another episode of the Self-Initiative Project Podcast.

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I’m your host, Jim O’Brien. Welcome to episode 14.

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This time we’re going to be talking with Van Seeley again about gun training.

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If you remember back episode four of our podcast, we talked about training versus gear.

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And if you haven’t checked out that podcast, I would highly recommend that.

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But Van’s back with us to discuss training, the ins and outs,

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and what to do, what not to do, and kind of his experience in firearms training.

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Hey, Van, welcome back. Hey, good morning. How are you, sir?

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I’m pretty good, thank you.

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It’s already been 10 episodes, and that’s about a year since we’ve done the

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first one almost because we try to put these out about once a month.

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So that’s kind of cool that we’re exactly 10 later. We’re back to talk more about gun training.

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You know, we’re hoping folks will go back and listen to Episode 4,

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But for those who have not or won’t get around to it and they’re listening to

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this one, I want you to kind of tell us a little bit about yourself,

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what your background is, and then specifically what your background,

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history, and experience is in gun training and the types that you’ve done, etc. et cetera?

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Okay. So I joined the Marine Corps in 92, ended up trying to get into recon,

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thought that was the best thing.

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Cool guys jumping out of airplanes, diving, shooting people,

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all that kind of cool stuff.

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So that’s where I ended up working my way into from a recon battalion to a force recon unit.

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Ended up doing several years as a special operations training group,

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CQB instructor, demolitions and sniper instructor.

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And then my last four years, I did a tour with the Army as a ranger instructor

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because Marine Corps recon guys from time to time, they’d send them to ranger school.

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So I was able to get that job. Not many Marines are able to become instructors there.

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So that was a neat tour duty for me. And then I just finished off a career 20 years.

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Retired up here in Dahlonega initially, and then now live in Flowery Branch.

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So that’s me in a nutshell. And after retirement, ended up wanting to get into firearms instruction.

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Teaching all the things that Marine Corps taught me and that I was blessed to experience and learn.

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And I wanted to pass that knowledge out to the civilian side of the house and

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then ended up in retail, which which was kind of a side shift from what I wanted,

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but it was retail and a gun store and a gun range.

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And then ended up in a managerial position and trying to kind of develop or

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evolve our training program and shooting at shooting events and that kind of stuff.

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So, you know, now with all things being what it is,

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you know, kind of slow down on the instructing side

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of that because of life

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and hobbies and time and work and all those all

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those things but training is definitely true to my heart for sure yeah i could

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imagine training takes up a big chunk of your time if you’re going to do it

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regularly for for the public yeah the difficulty with training is you know for

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as an instructor is you got to be able to train people when they’re not working.

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So it’s, you’ve got to do it on typically on when you’re not working also,

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which means on your free time or days off. So, right.

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That’s tough because you need some downtime for yourself, certainly.

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So you mentioned, you know, wanting to impart the knowledge that you had picked

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up in the Marine Corps to the civilian world is, was that kind of your motivation?

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What was it that you just like teaching that much

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or i i really did like it didn’t

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matter what it was what i was teaching i always like

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to see people learn a

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skill or take whatever from nothing and then watch their progression i mean

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i guess it’s a you know a fatherly thing i guess i don’t i don’t know how to

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explain it it’s just it’s a good feeling to be able to pass information on and

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pass knowledge on and people actually,

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it betters their lives or whatever their goals are, you know,

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you just made them better.

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And if you can save a life through your knowledge, information,

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or instruction, then that’s, I mean, that’s an amazing blessing for sure.

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That’s icing on the cake. Yeah, I completely understand what you’re saying.

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And I kind of enjoy what little bit I’ve done for the the same reasons as well.

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Talking about the types of training and how that transfers over to the civilian market or arena.

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How did you go about deciding what needed to get taught? Did you see a gap or

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was it that you just kind of had a program in mind that you wanted to do?

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And talk to us a little bit what that program or what types of programs you’ve

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typically put on and produced for the civilian industry market.

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Well, I had a difficult time in the beginning because, you know,

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in the Marine Corps, you’re teaching, you know, it’s force recon,

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MARSOC, special operations guys.

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They’re the, you know, the alphas of the alphas and they are tough to teach

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because they are already so knowledgeable.

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You know, if you get a fresh guy that’s new into a unit, it’s one thing.

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But you’re teaching some stuff that are hardcore based skills beyond,

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you know, with the mastery of those types of skills.

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And then they’re learning just some great things, but there’s still there.

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They have mastered baseline fundamentals.

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You know, they’re doing all the cool stuff, you know, blowing up door breaching

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doors, you know, taking shots that, you know, 1500 yards, you know,

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a high angle side of a mountain and all these other high end skill sets.

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So for me, that was a transition that was difficult because you get the civilian

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that wants to be that and wants to learn those types.

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They want to kick in doors like on day two or learn how to clear and close a

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room with their family, their three kids on a stack in the hallway ready to

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clear after a home invasion. Yeah.

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You know, it’s just or they want to shoot like, you know, Jerry Mikulik and,

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you know, after two hours of instruction.

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So that that was a tough transition for me as to building a curriculum that made sense.

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And what did I want to be? Did I want to be the intro instructor?

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Did I want to be the, let’s take it to the next level of mastery of fundamentals?

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Or did I want to just teach all the cool, fun stuff and put people…

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Lives in danger because all three exist in the

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firearms industry instructing and

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there’s instructors that teach it

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all there’s instructors that stick to certain you know certain demographics

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of those types of people that want to learn basics want to learn immediate and

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i i hope his basic instruction was kind of it to me but i found unless you had

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a solid baseline instruction instruction,

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you were going to struggle with my classes on the intermediate level.

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And that’s why I kind of designed skill builder classes when I was teaching.

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I didn’t want to teach, you know, you know, four man room clears and how to

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do a wounded, you know, weak hand, press check of your handgun while doing a speed reload.

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And, you know, all these things are, they have purpose, but you got to look at your.

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Student and what they’re coming there for, because certain classes will definitely

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draw certain types of people in a good way and a bad way. Sure.

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But, you know, my takeaway from all that, what you just said is that fundamentals

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and basics are still key to training.

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And I guess the other part that races through my mind is in both arenas,

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you probably had quite a bit or had the potential for quite a bit of ego that

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you had to deal with, which makes teaching instruction that much more difficult as well.

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Yeah. Well, I mean, we took like when I was a special operations training group,

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I taught force recon guys.

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I taught guys that taught me, you know, except full circle that student student

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becomes the instructor and instructor teaches a student.

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And it, you know, it just keeps going around and around.

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And we also taught basic guys. We taught basic grunts because they were going

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to be attached to that type of unit in a support position.

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And they had to be able to get in the stack and do everything, a force recon guy.

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But I told people, I said, you need to teach a monkey how to shoot.

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And that’s no offense to monkeys or humans, but it’s not a difficult thing.

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The difficult thing is the student.

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That is where the hiccup becomes because nothing you’re teaching is so difficult to do.

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It’s just, can that person apply those types of things?

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Reaching them in a way that they learn. Right. And that’s what I think instructing,

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you look at all instructors, I think all the courses evolve,

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some for good reasons, others for vanity reasons, and some because the market

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just is supply and demand.

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Man, you know, if you’re just teaching a basic NRA pistol course,

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then those are the types of people you’re going to draw in.

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Is that the, is that the demographic you’re trying to pull in or,

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or do you want these guys that,

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you know, they show up with their body armor and their multicam and their tactical

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this and 14 and a half pound, you know, ARs that have so much crap on them,

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but they don’t know how to use any of it, but it looked really cool.

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It looked really cool in call of duty. So wide range of student types for sure,

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based on the classes that you’re offering up.

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So, so circling back to episode four real quick, I don’t want to give away the

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conclusion, although, you know, it was centered around, should you spend your

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time and money and energy on gear or training?

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And the conclusion is probably pretty straightforward for folks.

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So that kind of brings us to, to this point.

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Why should someone seek out training just versus going to the range and trying

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to continue shooting for themselves?

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Why is training and practicing and getting into classes so important from your perspective?

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It comes down to the individual. Some people can watch a video and take it all

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in with no interaction with an instructor,

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no feedback from an instructor and just apply it.

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Most of us can’t do that.

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It’s not like Ikea furniture, like A goes to B, B goes to C, C goes to D.

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Then you’re like, I don’t know how the hell that go. And you get the wrong sequence

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and you don’t know why it’s not working. And then you got to call customer support.

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Well, instructors are customer support. They’re there to give you that direct

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feedback, be it good or bad, you know, they’re not going to pat you on the back

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and say, hey, that, you know, that 20 inch shot group you did at three yards.

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Good try, buddy. No, why, why is it that bad?

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So if you’re not understanding certain mechanics, especially being new to a

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skill, you got to get, you got to get training. You need instruction.

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After that instruction, after you find out why that process is done the way

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it is, then you can get on the range and then you can apply those things.

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And then because you have a better understanding, then you can start tweaking

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that specific skill or technique,

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for your body type or your weapon type or your situation because certain way

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to do things may not be the exact same way at night.

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You know, in your room three o’clock in the morning when somebody kicked in

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the front door and you try to shoot one round and all of a sudden,

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oh crap, I didn’t have a round in the chamber.

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Well, I need to put a round in the chamber. Well, I don’t know how to do that

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because I can’t see, you know, how to rack the slot, whatever the case, you know?

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So you got to get out there. You got to do both.

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I think if you don’t, I don’t think you can get to your full potential,

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but that’s not everybody.

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There’s always that 1% that would just exceed in anything they do.

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And they are frustrating because I’m not part of that 1%. I have to be taught

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something and then apply it and then practice it and keep practicing it because it’s all perishing.

00:13:24.436 –> 00:13:29.256
Yeah, and I think the importance of training really comes into play if you’re

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going to try to use a firearm in a defensive manner or if you’re going to carry

00:13:34.496 –> 00:13:38.296
concealed or whatever it may be on your person for self-defense, right?

00:13:38.796 –> 00:13:42.256
Training becomes even that much more important to seek out.

00:13:42.936 –> 00:13:47.976
But the one point that you made that I wanted to circle back on real quick that

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I think is key is that once you do go get training,

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formalized training where an instructor can be your customer support representative

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as you’re going through that process,

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the training doesn’t end there.

00:14:00.416 –> 00:14:05.036
It’s not like take one seminar and then set your firearms aside and don’t touch

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them for another six months after you’ve learned those skills that you’ve picked

00:14:09.716 –> 00:14:11.816
up in that class or that course seminar,

00:14:11.956 –> 00:14:16.536
whatever you want to call it, you know, it’s, it’s important that you go and

00:14:16.536 –> 00:14:21.176
those skills that you took away to go and practice and train on them on your

00:14:21.176 –> 00:14:26.056
own accord to get better at them and begin to see what they mean for you and

00:14:26.056 –> 00:14:28.896
how you’ve got to adjust for yourself and all those sorts of things.

00:14:29.016 –> 00:14:32.056
The training doesn’t stop after the class.

00:14:32.496 –> 00:14:35.136
And that’s, I think that’s It’s important for people to hear too.

00:14:36.085 –> 00:14:40.485
Yeah, absolutely. You’ve got to keep doing things like some people can,

00:14:40.585 –> 00:14:42.885
you know, it’s like riding a motorcycle,

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I guess you rode 20 years ago and then you’re going to buy the latest and greatest

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motorcycle and get on the road and go, go up and go up into the mountain,

00:14:50.205 –> 00:14:52.905
go zipping around the mountains. You’re probably going to end up having an accident.

00:14:53.005 –> 00:14:57.425
So you have to get out there and learn because that’s how you get better.

00:14:57.485 –> 00:14:58.505
That’s how you get faster.

00:14:58.605 –> 00:15:02.525
That’s how you become more accurate is you don’t do it through osmosis.

00:15:02.525 –> 00:15:04.025
You don’t do it through reading a book.

00:15:04.285 –> 00:15:07.445
You actually, with physical action, you have to practice it.

00:15:07.545 –> 00:15:12.225
And if you don’t understand concepts, you talk, you know, home invasion, like, what do you do?

00:15:12.425 –> 00:15:15.705
Well, there’s multiple things you can do in a home invasion.

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It all depends on how your home is set up. It depends on where you are during a home invasion.

00:15:20.285 –> 00:15:23.325
It depends on so many aspects. Was it daytime?

00:15:23.505 –> 00:15:26.665
Was it nighttime? Was it one person? Was it 12 people? You know,

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and if you’re not understanding things conceptually, you don’t know how to apply

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those skills at the right time.

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And all those various scenarios that could occur.

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Your philosophies, your personal philosophies when you are trying to train someone

00:15:41.825 –> 00:15:43.225
or you’re teaching a class,

00:15:43.385 –> 00:15:48.965
what are your philosophies towards training in general that have worked for

00:15:48.965 –> 00:15:52.425
you or that have evolved or even changed or just didn’t work?

00:15:53.725 –> 00:16:00.605
And like I said before, it was a tough transition for me to train people that

00:16:00.605 –> 00:16:07.165
were extremely knowledgeable already or they were an open book and they were teachable.

00:16:08.485 –> 00:16:14.485
Getting into the civilian side of things, I think a lot of folks I found out

00:16:14.485 –> 00:16:16.385
didn’t know as much as they thought they knew.

00:16:16.385 –> 00:16:22.605
So I had to change my tone because, you know, being a Marine Corps force recon,

00:16:22.785 –> 00:16:27.085
typically very, they’re alpha male, but they’re very, you know,

00:16:27.105 –> 00:16:28.805
it’s like everybody’s first name basis.

00:16:29.025 –> 00:16:35.885
It’s professional, but it’s, you have an immersion in a relationship with that

00:16:35.885 –> 00:16:40.485
student already for whatever reason, guys have deployed before,

00:16:40.585 –> 00:16:43.685
whatever. You don’t really have that relationship a lot of times.

00:16:44.145 –> 00:16:48.905
Let’s get a repeat student or like when I was running skill builders,

00:16:48.965 –> 00:16:52.565
you would see the same student go through the continue that,

00:16:52.605 –> 00:16:54.105
you know, the next step process.

00:16:55.365 –> 00:16:56.425
So for me.

00:16:58.159 –> 00:17:02.959
I had to kind of slow things down and I’m not saying dumb things down,

00:17:03.099 –> 00:17:11.299
but speak in a different manner with, and stop assuming that,

00:17:11.319 –> 00:17:15.099
you know what I’m talking about when I say something really quick and like,

00:17:15.759 –> 00:17:20.979
how do you not know what slide lock is if you’re taking a handgun class?

00:17:21.239 –> 00:17:27.139
And I, I taught basic years ago, like NRA certification kind of thing, check the block.

00:17:27.819 –> 00:17:30.959
Great and i got away from basic because

00:17:30.959 –> 00:17:34.359
i i didn’t feel that was my niche that was my passion

00:17:34.359 –> 00:17:40.639
i wanted to get those people to shoot you don’t learn that really in a basic

00:17:40.639 –> 00:17:45.399
in a right class you know you learn basic safety and what a primary is and all

00:17:45.399 –> 00:17:50.739
this other stuff you learn how to shoot in an intermediate class and what i

00:17:50.739 –> 00:17:53.979
would call an intermediate class like the skill builder classes that I took.

00:17:54.059 –> 00:17:59.479
So I had to learn how to tone things down, not make assumptions and,

00:17:59.539 –> 00:18:04.579
and not think about trying to jam, you know, 10 pounds of poo in a five pound bag.

00:18:04.839 –> 00:18:08.999
I had to think of it as a stepping stone.

00:18:09.159 –> 00:18:13.179
Like let’s do phase one, then phase two, then phase three, then phase four,

00:18:13.219 –> 00:18:18.019
whatever, and not get ahead of myself just because when you’re wired,

00:18:18.079 –> 00:18:21.119
you know, training like spec ops guys,

00:18:21.659 –> 00:18:26.099
you’ve got a lot of stuff you’ve got to jam in a five-week shooting package.

00:18:27.259 –> 00:18:31.139
That’s not just individually based, it’s team-based, it’s platoon-based.

00:18:32.059 –> 00:18:37.119
So you’ve got to do a lot quickly and it’s heavy, hard, 110 miles an hour.

00:18:37.239 –> 00:18:41.859
So I had to change that. My philosophy there was slow things down,

00:18:42.559 –> 00:18:48.099
not rush, get back to the basics, get back to basic draw, basic presentation, basic trigger control.

00:18:48.699 –> 00:18:51.739
Because if you start racing,

00:18:52.434 –> 00:18:55.294
fast, if you start pushing the envelope,

00:18:55.594 –> 00:19:00.154
that’s when accidents happen because they don’t have the baseline safety there,

00:19:00.274 –> 00:19:05.214
you know, okay, shoot two to the torso and in a second and a half from the holster,

00:19:05.294 –> 00:19:09.254
you know, at five yards, they’re like, they can’t even get out of the holster in five yards.

00:19:09.334 –> 00:19:12.774
And you wonder why they they’re not hitting the target because you went too

00:19:12.774 –> 00:19:16.734
fast too soon because they didn’t have the basics of a basic draw.

00:19:16.854 –> 00:19:20.394
They didn’t have the basics of, you know, trigger control.

00:19:20.934 –> 00:19:23.974
And now you’re doing trigger control in the compressed time.

00:19:24.094 –> 00:19:30.294
So I kind of had to change the way I was bringing in students and training them.

00:19:30.474 –> 00:19:37.774
And on the other side was you can’t put most civilians through an eight-hour

00:19:37.774 –> 00:19:41.054
training class, an eight-hour shooting class, because you will have people at

00:19:41.054 –> 00:19:45.174
the end of the day mentally checked out because it’s so much information.

00:19:45.834 –> 00:19:50.294
It’s very taxing on the body and the mind. And most people aren’t physically,

00:19:50.774 –> 00:19:52.854
and mentally fit for that.

00:19:52.954 –> 00:19:56.654
They don’t, you know, when’s the last time you went through a hardcore eight

00:19:56.654 –> 00:20:00.914
hour training course? I mean, you’ve trained, you’ve trained Krav and other martial arts.

00:20:01.134 –> 00:20:04.834
If you do that for eight hours, you’re going to be sleeping for the next two days.

00:20:04.874 –> 00:20:09.294
And you probably didn’t retain the latter half of that training class because you’re,

00:20:09.294 –> 00:20:12.794
you’re mentally so taxed yeah definitely

00:20:12.794 –> 00:20:15.794
definitely but you make a good point too that even

00:20:15.794 –> 00:20:18.714
in the as you begin to progress through the different levels

00:20:18.714 –> 00:20:24.454
of training you know from the basics of safety and how to hold a firearm and

00:20:24.454 –> 00:20:28.454
here are the different parts of the ammunition and here’s the different parts

00:20:28.454 –> 00:20:33.334
of the gun itself even when you begin to progress into learning how to shoot

00:20:33.334 –> 00:20:37.914
more there’s still fundamentals and basics at that level right to your point you made,

00:20:38.054 –> 00:20:40.214
like, you know, the exercise of

00:20:40.214 –> 00:20:45.174
drawing from holster and getting two shots center mass or whatever it is.

00:20:45.674 –> 00:20:49.734
First of all, have you ever drawn from a holster before? So you got to start there, right?

00:20:49.794 –> 00:20:54.054
And work your way through the, through the levels as you go and,

00:20:54.114 –> 00:20:58.114
and try not to give them too much at the same time at all at once.

00:20:58.594 –> 00:21:02.114
Yeah. And yeah, you, you have to do it in steps.

00:21:02.214 –> 00:21:07.754
And I kind of, I fall back to, I took a Glock armor course and the one of the

00:21:07.754 –> 00:21:11.234
first things the block armor says is do not get ahead of me.

00:21:11.852 –> 00:21:17.332
And the guy’s not even five minutes into a class, and you hear somebody banging

00:21:17.332 –> 00:21:21.092
on something, and you look back, and you’re like, dude, what are you doing?

00:21:21.192 –> 00:21:25.172
He’s just talking about the different parts of the handgun, and you’re already

00:21:25.172 –> 00:21:26.452
disassembling the handgun.

00:21:26.572 –> 00:21:31.092
Yeah. And, you know, the instructor’s looking at him like, we’re not even there yet, bud.

00:21:31.152 –> 00:21:37.872
Just let’s slow things down, you know? And that part of the learning curve for

00:21:37.872 –> 00:21:40.952
an instructor and a student is you’ve got to have that relationship.

00:21:40.952 –> 00:21:45.272
Relationship, but the, you may not understand the pieces of the puzzle.

00:21:45.472 –> 00:21:48.172
It’s kind of, you know, I think I’ve mentioned this before, you know,

00:21:48.192 –> 00:21:51.832
it’s those weird, weird pictures in which when you stare at it,

00:21:51.872 –> 00:21:53.352
you don’t know what it is.

00:21:53.412 –> 00:21:56.812
And then you kind of unfocus and then you’re like, oh, that’s a ship on the

00:21:56.812 –> 00:21:59.152
ocean. You know, it’s like a, it’s a puzzle.

00:21:59.292 –> 00:22:02.472
When you start putting pieces of the puzzle together, you may not even know

00:22:02.472 –> 00:22:08.852
what the picture is yet, but, but respect Expect the process because there has to be a process.

00:22:09.172 –> 00:22:15.552
And if there isn’t, then you can mechanically or train yourself incorrectly

00:22:15.552 –> 00:22:18.212
and get some really bad habits.

00:22:18.252 –> 00:22:22.952
And then it just gets worse and worse and more difficult to fix those bad habits.

00:22:23.092 –> 00:22:27.892
Because now relearning something is one of the most difficult things to do.

00:22:27.972 –> 00:22:31.052
It’s easy when it’s a clean slate. You know, it’s like artwork.

00:22:31.292 –> 00:22:35.692
If it’s a blank canvas, you can paint whatever picture you want. Yeah.

00:22:35.872 –> 00:22:40.592
If there’s already a picture there, you got to paint over the picture to make a new picture.

00:22:40.692 –> 00:22:43.592
And that’s very difficult to do. It takes a lot of pain. Yeah.

00:22:43.692 –> 00:22:49.212
So that is a great segue into this next question that I wanted to ask you, which came to mind.

00:22:49.852 –> 00:22:55.032
What issues do you typically see with students that might prevent them from

00:22:55.032 –> 00:22:56.932
getting the most from training?

00:22:57.112 –> 00:23:02.092
Is it that they already come with preconceived notions or a skill set they think

00:23:02.092 –> 00:23:04.492
they already have? What is it that…

00:23:05.163 –> 00:23:10.243
Maybe holds them back from getting the most out of, out of a course, do you think?

00:23:10.863 –> 00:23:14.723
Yeah. Yeah. I wrote some kind of keynotes down here. I think a big,

00:23:14.723 –> 00:23:19.043
a big one is that the couple mentality, you already know everything.

00:23:19.223 –> 00:23:23.183
You’re just there for, you know, some trigger time or some, you’re,

00:23:23.183 –> 00:23:26.563
you need to check and check a blog with your department or whatever.

00:23:27.543 –> 00:23:32.803
That one, if I ever got students that, you know, I, I, you try to put input

00:23:32.803 –> 00:23:38.243
into them, You try to fine tune the things that you see they’re doing either

00:23:38.243 –> 00:23:41.863
mechanically incorrect or they could be doing a little bit better.

00:23:42.763 –> 00:23:47.063
Once they once I get that cup full mentality, they’re not going to correct anything.

00:23:47.583 –> 00:23:52.183
My time as an instructor is going to now be invested in the rest of the class,

00:23:52.383 –> 00:23:56.323
you know, and and I’ve had students say, well, you didn’t spend a lot of time

00:23:56.323 –> 00:23:58.643
with me. Well, one of two reasons.

00:23:58.763 –> 00:24:03.863
You either didn’t listen to anything I had to say, sidebar conversations while

00:24:03.863 –> 00:24:08.863
I’m trying to teach, or I try to make a correction based off of what I’m teaching.

00:24:09.123 –> 00:24:13.043
You just go back to what you’re doing because that’s what you want to do.

00:24:13.243 –> 00:24:15.723
You don’t follow the drills. You don’t follow commands.

00:24:16.423 –> 00:24:19.403
Yet, I’ve got other people that actually care to be here.

00:24:19.743 –> 00:24:22.603
So I’m going to go invest my time with those other folks.

00:24:22.603 –> 00:24:30.123
Books old habits like i said repainting the canvas difficult thing but it’s difficult only because,

00:24:30.943 –> 00:24:36.583
under a lot of times people personally or they individually personally stress

00:24:36.583 –> 00:24:41.683
out for whatever reason you put a shot timer next to their ear all of a sudden

00:24:41.683 –> 00:24:45.883
that technique you just taught goes out the window it goes out the window and

00:24:45.883 –> 00:24:47.903
they they default back to what they’ve been doing.

00:24:49.043 –> 00:24:52.083
That’s a tough one to break as long as,

00:24:53.182 –> 00:24:56.582
You can get them to understand, hey, you just did this. No, I didn’t.

00:24:56.582 –> 00:24:59.042
Yeah, you did. I just watched you do that. Okay.

00:25:00.062 –> 00:25:03.722
Let’s slow things down.

00:25:04.762 –> 00:25:07.322
Attitude. You got to have a good attitude going in.

00:25:08.782 –> 00:25:16.482
I’ve had days where training jujitsu or crab or whatever, you have a bad day.

00:25:17.742 –> 00:25:21.382
Sometimes your head’s not in it. You got to walk away. You know,

00:25:21.422 –> 00:25:24.362
don’t run just for the sake of running.

00:25:24.462 –> 00:25:28.722
You know, if it’s crappy weather, then you’re putting yourself out there.

00:25:28.762 –> 00:25:31.982
You’re going to do yourself more harm than good. So you got to have a good attitude.

00:25:32.242 –> 00:25:35.162
Not being prepared. That’s that’s mental and physical.

00:25:35.642 –> 00:25:39.822
I think, unfortunately, in this country, we’re not as physically fit as we should be.

00:25:39.822 –> 00:25:42.922
Yeah especially these days yeah yeah so

00:25:42.922 –> 00:25:45.702
and like i said an eight-hour training class is

00:25:45.702 –> 00:25:48.622
very taxing physically and mentally and some

00:25:48.622 –> 00:25:51.322
people if you you got crap going going on in your

00:25:51.322 –> 00:25:54.582
life and your head’s not into it but not

00:25:54.582 –> 00:25:58.782
prepared is also not having the right equipment hey show up for class it’s this

00:25:58.782 –> 00:26:03.862
class we’re going to shoot about you know three three hundred rounds max so

00:26:03.862 –> 00:26:08.582
what would i do i’d bring 500 rounds because you never know you know who’s who

00:26:08.582 –> 00:26:12.382
says they’re They’re going to have extra ammo at the training class I’m going to.

00:26:13.608 –> 00:26:18.148
And not having a prerequisite. Yeah, a lot of people get all huffy about.

00:26:18.348 –> 00:26:23.348
Well, they said I need this certification or I need proof that I took this class

00:26:23.348 –> 00:26:26.388
and I did 20 years in the military. I know what the hell I’m doing.

00:26:26.508 –> 00:26:30.368
I hate to break it to you, but I’ve served with plenty of people that had 20

00:26:30.368 –> 00:26:33.328
years in the military that had no idea what the hell they were doing with a firearm.

00:26:33.328 –> 00:26:36.768
So prerequisites are

00:26:36.768 –> 00:26:39.748
out there for a reason and it’s for both the

00:26:39.748 –> 00:26:42.908
instructors your safety the other student’s

00:26:42.908 –> 00:26:46.408
safety and the instructor safety and there

00:26:46.408 –> 00:26:51.028
also might be requirements an instructor has to have on an insurance level that

00:26:51.028 –> 00:27:01.348
you know it is what it is you know if you say that you know I had my evolution

00:27:01.348 –> 00:27:05.628
in teaching and what I was teaching and what my prerequisites were.

00:27:05.808 –> 00:27:10.488
I didn’t really have many prerequisites until I started my skill builder courses

00:27:10.488 –> 00:27:19.028
because I got to know what you’re coming in with because I got to know what I can provide you.

00:27:19.028 –> 00:27:21.908
You if i’m teaching a class and

00:27:21.908 –> 00:27:24.868
we’re getting into like a skill builder three where there’s

00:27:24.868 –> 00:27:28.248
shooting and moving and drawing and reloading on

00:27:28.248 –> 00:27:35.428
the move and or in and around barricades and you can barely understand the fly

00:27:35.428 –> 00:27:40.848
lock and a standard reload is right you know that’s it’s beyond your skill level

00:27:40.848 –> 00:27:45.048
so you gotta have a little out of place you gotta have something thing,

00:27:45.048 –> 00:27:46.588
even for basic handgun class.

00:27:47.448 –> 00:27:53.788
There’s prerequisites for basic handgun class, like can you sit still and stay

00:27:53.788 –> 00:27:57.268
off your phone for four hours and listen to the instructor?

00:27:57.388 –> 00:27:59.948
Can you actually listen to an instructor?

00:28:00.228 –> 00:28:03.168
I’ve had women call, well, I want a female instructor.

00:28:04.328 –> 00:28:08.628
Why? Can you not listen to a male instructor?

00:28:08.868 –> 00:28:12.428
Is there some sort of barrier? Because a male instructor.

00:28:13.914 –> 00:28:18.214
A good instructor doesn’t matter gender. I’ve seen some really good male instructors,

00:28:18.454 –> 00:28:21.934
and I’ve seen some crappy ones, and I’ve seen some really good female instructors,

00:28:21.954 –> 00:28:23.134
and I’ve seen some crappy ones.

00:28:23.554 –> 00:28:29.374
So, you know, that student-instructor, it’s a relationship.

00:28:30.494 –> 00:28:34.194
So you’ve got to have that. So you both have to give a little and take a little.

00:28:34.334 –> 00:28:38.114
But you make a really good point that, you know, not only just from a skill

00:28:38.114 –> 00:28:42.114
set and what you’re capable of doing in a class, If you’re skipping classes

00:28:42.114 –> 00:28:46.194
that are suggested prior to taking a specific level,

00:28:46.354 –> 00:28:52.274
there’s a real safety issue potentially in trying to skip and have students

00:28:52.274 –> 00:28:55.674
coming into a, if you call it skill level three,

00:28:55.794 –> 00:29:01.894
when they don’t have the basics and foundations of what it’s even like to shoot

00:29:01.894 –> 00:29:07.054
next to or in between others that have guns, live guns,

00:29:07.314 –> 00:29:10.334
loaded guns on either side of them, right?

00:29:10.654 –> 00:29:14.694
So it’s a safety issue. If nothing else, forget the skills and them not knowing

00:29:14.694 –> 00:29:16.614
what they’re doing, although that’s a major issue.

00:29:16.694 –> 00:29:21.194
Just the potential for there being safety issues is a reason why you need to.

00:29:21.634 –> 00:29:25.694
There’s a reason why you should progress through training and start with the

00:29:25.694 –> 00:29:29.354
basics and work your way up to those advanced classes, even though you think

00:29:29.354 –> 00:29:31.214
you may have a handle on the fundamentals.

00:29:31.974 –> 00:29:34.674
There’s a reason why you need to be going through the progression.

00:29:34.774 –> 00:29:38.634
And I think the safety is a is a key point of why you want to do that.

00:29:38.634 –> 00:29:46.074
Not just for you as a student, but for the instructor and the other members in the class as well.

00:29:46.694 –> 00:29:50.334
Yeah, definitely. I mean, I taught a class where I was downrange,

00:29:50.494 –> 00:29:52.354
standing in front of students.

00:29:52.374 –> 00:29:55.994
And students aren’t used to, like, they have a loaded gun in the holster,

00:29:56.014 –> 00:29:58.954
and I’m standing in front of them between them and the target,

00:29:59.014 –> 00:30:03.014
not while they’re shooting, but just teaching a period of instruction because

00:30:03.014 –> 00:30:04.234
I want to stand in front of them.

00:30:05.065 –> 00:30:10.645
And, you know, I have one guy draw his gun out because he wants to check to see if it’s loaded.

00:30:10.825 –> 00:30:15.385
I’m like, dude, like that. That’s day one.

00:30:15.825 –> 00:30:20.125
Even my teenager knows you don’t do that.

00:30:20.245 –> 00:30:25.045
Like, what were you thinking? thinking, because they didn’t have a basic understanding,

00:30:25.225 –> 00:30:28.025
a basic respect for the four safety rules.

00:30:28.265 –> 00:30:32.725
And every time I would teach my class, I’d always start out with the four basic safety rules.

00:30:32.865 –> 00:30:37.665
But it became a mantra of, okay, treat every farm as if it were loaded,

00:30:37.725 –> 00:30:39.285
even after you’re sure to be unloaded.

00:30:39.305 –> 00:30:41.525
You don’t ever point a farm into anything you’re not intended to shoot,

00:30:41.605 –> 00:30:42.545
blah, blah, blah, blah, blah.

00:30:42.965 –> 00:30:46.925
And people, they’ve already tuned that out. They’re like, oh, I know them.

00:30:47.225 –> 00:30:52.345
But you just violated it. So don’t tell me you know it. But you don’t. You need to apply it.

00:30:52.365 –> 00:30:57.625
You may know of them, but you let’s let’s break it down as to why you do these

00:30:57.625 –> 00:30:59.485
or why you don’t do these things. Yeah.

00:31:00.265 –> 00:31:04.285
But that’s you’re going to get that. Yeah. You know, every class I’ve had,

00:31:04.345 –> 00:31:07.305
I don’t think I’ve had 10 students out of all 10.

00:31:07.365 –> 00:31:14.325
I don’t think I’ve had, you know, one student that didn’t at one point do something unsafe. safe.

00:31:14.705 –> 00:31:20.045
Fortunately, you know, we have multiple safeties involved, multiple,

00:31:20.125 –> 00:31:23.525
you know, overlaps that nobody ever got hurt.

00:31:23.645 –> 00:31:29.745
You know, I’ve had several negligent discharges in training classes with students.

00:31:29.965 –> 00:31:37.985
I’ve had one student shoot himself in the leg reholstering during a shooting event.

00:31:37.985 –> 00:31:41.365
Then so and competent shooter but

00:31:41.365 –> 00:31:44.865
in a certain situation in a certain environment that he

00:31:44.865 –> 00:31:47.625
personally was stressed out and i could already tell that

00:31:47.625 –> 00:31:51.325
you know his head wasn’t in the game already he had an accident shot himself

00:31:51.325 –> 00:31:56.825
in the leg luckily it wasn’t fatal luckily nobody else got hurt yeah but but

00:31:56.825 –> 00:32:00.925
the point was he wasn’t paying attention and that’ll get you in trouble in a

00:32:00.925 –> 00:32:04.385
hurry so i was going to ask and i know we talked about some of this stuff ahead

00:32:04.385 –> 00:32:06.365
of time but I was going to ask, what do you find?

00:32:06.445 –> 00:32:10.045
Because I know you’ve kind of walked away from training for the time being for

00:32:10.045 –> 00:32:12.805
a lot of different reasons, and most of which is personal time.

00:32:12.925 –> 00:32:16.245
And I get that because, like you said, you have to train when everyone else

00:32:16.245 –> 00:32:19.045
is free and available, which is generally during your free time.

00:32:19.325 –> 00:32:22.545
I was going to ask you what you find the most frustrating with training.

00:32:22.685 –> 00:32:27.425
But I think, and it’s as I expected, I think it’s safe to say that it’s people

00:32:27.425 –> 00:32:29.785
claiming Claiming to be safe,

00:32:29.965 –> 00:32:35.645
thinking they know the safety rules, but not ensuring and being adamant about

00:32:35.645 –> 00:32:38.605
following them as closely as maybe they should.

00:32:38.765 –> 00:32:40.865
And I think that’s a safe bet.

00:32:42.938 –> 00:32:45.958
Yeah, definitely. Yeah, I would say that that’s on the top for sure.

00:32:46.498 –> 00:32:51.158
So, yeah, circling back, I know we talked about ammo and coming to class prepared

00:32:51.158 –> 00:32:53.478
with maybe more ammo than what’s stated.

00:32:53.618 –> 00:32:55.978
You know, I think some of your classes in the past, you’ve said,

00:32:56.078 –> 00:32:58.838
hey, you know, bring 250 rounds or 300.

00:32:59.018 –> 00:33:02.158
And a lot of cases we didn’t wind up going through all of that.

00:33:02.198 –> 00:33:05.198
But, you know, you should bring more than that just in case.

00:33:05.218 –> 00:33:09.738
And I’ve been guilty of that myself where I’m I’m down 25 rounds because I didn’t

00:33:09.738 –> 00:33:12.978
bring that one extra box. What other sorts of gear?

00:33:13.058 –> 00:33:17.658
I know we’ve got these tactical guys that like to come in with the four inch

00:33:17.658 –> 00:33:21.878
wide belts and their first aid kits hanging off the back and their chalk pocket

00:33:21.878 –> 00:33:28.338
back there and 16 magazines around it and their 511 combat boots and whatever else.

00:33:28.338 –> 00:33:35.618
But if you had to keep it simple for a student looking to actually train and learn and progress,

00:33:36.018 –> 00:33:42.678
what basic sorts of equipment should they expect to show up with and what sorts

00:33:42.678 –> 00:33:43.898
of equipment do they need?

00:33:44.738 –> 00:33:48.778
Well, first thing I would do if I was a student going to a training course,

00:33:48.898 –> 00:33:52.278
I would look at the curriculum, look at what is being taught.

00:33:52.398 –> 00:33:59.458
Then I would consider based off of what is being taught, what is in the curriculum, what is my goal?

00:33:59.838 –> 00:34:03.998
You know, am I learning for the end of the world, zombie apocalypse?

00:34:04.358 –> 00:34:08.358
Okay, bring all your kit, you know, your body armor, like you said,

00:34:08.358 –> 00:34:12.018
your tax bill, your cool guy stuff, your multi-cam hat, your,

00:34:12.058 –> 00:34:15.518
your ops core helmet and all this other stuff. Right.

00:34:15.858 –> 00:34:19.718
That’s how you want to train. That’s great. Most guys I’ve ever seen that’s

00:34:19.718 –> 00:34:21.758
never taken an eight hour training class.

00:34:22.647 –> 00:34:25.467
They last about 30 minutes with all that crap on, and then they go,

00:34:25.527 –> 00:34:29.847
man, this crap’s heavy, and they take it off. Strip it off, which defeats the purpose.

00:34:30.647 –> 00:34:35.767
Right. And again, you’ve got to build that endurance, that mental, physical endurance.

00:34:35.967 –> 00:34:40.787
But first and foremost, think about what the class is. Let’s say it’s an intermediate handgun class.

00:34:41.147 –> 00:34:44.627
Okay. And what are we working on? Well, you have to have a holster first off.

00:34:44.627 –> 00:34:50.487
So you’ve got to make sure it’s a quality holster, not one of these 599 nylon

00:34:50.487 –> 00:34:52.367
holsters with the thumb snap.

00:34:52.667 –> 00:34:57.927
And when it hangs off your belt, the gun’s almost hanging upside down. Dangling, yeah.

00:34:59.027 –> 00:35:04.007
Make sure you are adhering to the instructor’s guidelines as to gear and equipment

00:35:04.007 –> 00:35:08.007
because you’re not going to go through any course of mine when I was teaching

00:35:08.007 –> 00:35:11.367
with a cross-draw holster, a shoulder holster, a small-of-the-back holster,

00:35:11.407 –> 00:35:13.047
or an appendix carry holster.

00:35:13.607 –> 00:35:19.427
Appendix carry is getting very, very popular. I’m seeing even some very large people appendix carry.

00:35:19.547 –> 00:35:23.767
I don’t know how they’re going to get to the gun, but they’re doing it. But that’s okay.

00:35:24.587 –> 00:35:28.507
But the reason a lot of instructors won’t allow appendix carrying in their training

00:35:28.507 –> 00:35:33.527
course is nobody wants to see you shoot your junk off in class because you’re in a hurry.

00:35:34.727 –> 00:35:37.727
Probably appendix carry is a class in and of itself anyway.

00:35:38.407 –> 00:35:43.727
Right. And it’s more of the safety side of things. but you got to have a quality firearm.

00:35:44.207 –> 00:35:50.007
Don’t show up with your, you know, your, your Yemenis three 80 to take a defensive handgun class.

00:35:50.607 –> 00:35:55.187
It’s really not going to work, have proper equipment that supports it,

00:35:55.227 –> 00:36:00.387
have a backup, every class, every carbine class I’ve run, every handgun class I’ve run.

00:36:00.507 –> 00:36:04.947
Now, if I ran it at the range, obviously I had backup guns there,

00:36:05.047 –> 00:36:08.687
but you know, I run a training class off site somewhere and,

00:36:09.054 –> 00:36:14.054
I would always bring multiple extra guns that a student could use when there’s

00:36:14.054 –> 00:36:18.254
breaks because they didn’t get a good quality optic.

00:36:18.394 –> 00:36:22.334
They didn’t function check any of their stuff prior to their class.

00:36:22.474 –> 00:36:26.154
They didn’t have a zero on the rifle that was in part of the prerequisite.

00:36:26.214 –> 00:36:27.974
Make sure your rifle is zero.

00:36:28.114 –> 00:36:31.374
So make sure you’re checking the block as to what that instructor wants.

00:36:31.374 –> 00:36:35.254
They didn’t put that spend all the time to put those prerequisites in their

00:36:35.254 –> 00:36:39.874
class for gear and equipment and expectations because they just needed to type

00:36:39.874 –> 00:36:41.574
something for you. you’re not following.

00:36:42.074 –> 00:36:49.034
Right. And it’s so you don’t have to take time away doing silly crap like fixing

00:36:49.034 –> 00:36:52.554
a sling to a rifle because you failed to bring a sling.

00:36:52.594 –> 00:36:58.974
And now I just took 15 minutes away from 12 other students to fix your rifle

00:36:58.974 –> 00:37:01.534
because you didn’t have the proper equipment.

00:37:01.654 –> 00:37:09.274
So to me, not showing up prepared is selfish and disrespectful to both the instructor

00:37:09.274 –> 00:37:10.634
and And the students and given.

00:37:11.114 –> 00:37:14.434
Yeah, you’re paying. You’re a customer. I get that. You paid one hundred seventy

00:37:14.434 –> 00:37:15.654
five dollars for a training class.

00:37:15.814 –> 00:37:19.774
I get that. But I hate to break it to you. The world does not revolve around you.

00:37:20.014 –> 00:37:21.854
There are other students there

00:37:21.854 –> 00:37:28.994
that did come prepared that they took the necessary steps before class.

00:37:29.254 –> 00:37:33.134
So why couldn’t you got to show up with the right equipment and you can’t show

00:37:33.134 –> 00:37:35.334
up where you don’t know how to do this.

00:37:35.374 –> 00:37:37.894
I don’t know how to fix it. Well, you were supposed to know that before class.

00:37:37.894 –> 00:37:41.734
You were supposed to be able to be prepared before class, have your magazines

00:37:41.734 –> 00:37:45.334
preloaded before class, if that’s OK with the instructor.

00:37:45.574 –> 00:37:51.794
Usually when you sign up for a training class, I went through one class a couple

00:37:51.794 –> 00:37:53.694
of months ago. It wasn’t firearms related.

00:37:53.914 –> 00:37:56.874
I sent this guy four emails asking questions.

00:37:57.054 –> 00:38:01.034
I wanted information about the class expectations, what I can do,

00:38:01.154 –> 00:38:05.734
what I can’t do and all this other stuff. So I didn’t get a response from him

00:38:05.734 –> 00:38:09.934
for two months and it was four emails. I was like, Oh, whatever. I showed up for class.

00:38:10.194 –> 00:38:12.834
I was like, yeah, it was four hours. Boom. I left. Yeah.

00:38:13.394 –> 00:38:15.774
I’m paying for your time. And I.

00:38:16.346 –> 00:38:20.566
I’m trying to get more information. So send emails out, give your instructors

00:38:20.566 –> 00:38:24.106
a call and say, hey, is this OK? Is that OK? Or I don’t have this.

00:38:24.306 –> 00:38:28.746
What are my options? Yeah, that’s it. And that way you’re not showing up with

00:38:28.746 –> 00:38:31.626
like the, oh, wait, I was supposed to bring my own eye pro.

00:38:31.926 –> 00:38:36.686
Oh, yeah. I mean, yes. Yeah. Well, it’s in the book. Right.

00:38:36.906 –> 00:38:41.706
And you should, you know, just to to wrap that one up, you should definitely

00:38:41.706 –> 00:38:45.506
be planning ahead and have your own eyes and ears.

00:38:45.506 –> 00:38:49.706
Is right your own eye protection and your own hearing protection for sure just

00:38:49.706 –> 00:38:54.566
the basics just the fundamentals yeah well instructors are always in my opinion

00:38:54.566 –> 00:38:56.766
should always have backup equipment.

00:38:57.386 –> 00:39:01.326
It’s just it’s just how it is it’s things break things are unexpected that’s

00:39:01.326 –> 00:39:06.786
okay i get that you know just be prepared i i tend to be over prepared like

00:39:06.786 –> 00:39:11.326
i went to a training class i would bring two guns of each you know up with the

00:39:11.326 –> 00:39:16.046
carbine handgun class i bring the carbine two handguns. Not everybody has that luxury.

00:39:16.246 –> 00:39:19.706
You know, I bring like says a thousand rounds. I bring 2000 rounds.

00:39:19.786 –> 00:39:21.126
It said, you know, bring water.

00:39:21.266 –> 00:39:24.306
You know, I’d bring a 55 gallon drum of water.

00:39:24.366 –> 00:39:30.186
Um, you know, so I’d always go over the top, but I’ve never been at the point

00:39:30.186 –> 00:39:31.226
to where I’m like, Oh crap.

00:39:31.346 –> 00:39:35.146
I’ve actually been fortunate enough to where I’ve helped out other students

00:39:35.146 –> 00:39:39.126
in the class weren’t prepared and you can, you can help out.

00:39:39.186 –> 00:39:44.046
So definitely need to find yourself good training, Get through training and

00:39:44.046 –> 00:39:48.606
expect to start from the basics and work your way through, especially when you

00:39:48.606 –> 00:39:49.766
don’t have a lot of experience.

00:39:50.246 –> 00:39:53.766
Show up with an open mind. Check your ego at the door.

00:39:54.166 –> 00:39:58.646
Come prepared with the proper gear, maybe a little bit more than what’s asked.

00:39:59.446 –> 00:40:04.786
Follow the prerequisites, not just as far as the training itself goes,

00:40:04.946 –> 00:40:08.966
but as far as what the instructors asked for you to come, whether it’s magazines

00:40:08.966 –> 00:40:13.506
loaded or not loaded. your rifles zeroed. Yeah.

00:40:14.046 –> 00:40:20.706
So if I’m trying to find instruction, trying to find good training as a student,

00:40:20.806 –> 00:40:22.806
what should I be looking for?

00:40:22.866 –> 00:40:26.346
What’s considered good training and what should I expect from my instructor?

00:40:27.923 –> 00:40:31.083
Good training is difficult if you

00:40:31.083 –> 00:40:33.763
show up you don’t really know if it was going to be good

00:40:33.763 –> 00:40:36.603
training i i know guys that have gone to

00:40:36.603 –> 00:40:39.443
some high-end instructors that have that have walked away

00:40:39.443 –> 00:40:42.243
and said and that was not really worth the

00:40:42.243 –> 00:40:48.923
285 dollars for the six-hour class of war stories and you know watch him shoot

00:40:48.923 –> 00:40:52.983
and you know i didn’t get a lot of trigger time i fired you know 200 hundred

00:40:52.983 –> 00:40:59.683
rounds in an eight-hour class is to me yeah kind of it depends on the class but you know.

00:41:00.383 –> 00:41:06.483
Looking at reviews maybe you know it if i was running a professional training

00:41:06.483 –> 00:41:10.643
school and i had a website and i could have all these reviews on my website

00:41:10.643 –> 00:41:14.703
i’m not going to have a review that gives me bad feedback so looking at reviews

00:41:14.703 –> 00:41:20.323
is one of those things that as a company can can kind of,

00:41:20.323 –> 00:41:23.083
you know, control or filter.

00:41:23.403 –> 00:41:27.483
However, there are plenty of blogs, plenty of forums out there where people

00:41:27.483 –> 00:41:31.343
talk like, hey, this was great, or I went to this class and this was great,

00:41:31.423 –> 00:41:34.063
and I went to the same damn class, dude, and I thought it sucked.

00:41:34.683 –> 00:41:37.223
Everybody’s going to have a different perspective, a different expectation.

00:41:37.803 –> 00:41:42.963
I think from an instructor, as a student, what I expect out of the instructor

00:41:42.963 –> 00:41:46.083
is professionalism, knowledge, and patience.

00:41:46.703 –> 00:41:51.543
Yeah, patience is a big one. Yeah, those are my big three, because we all have

00:41:51.543 –> 00:41:53.703
a different learning curve. We all have different abilities.

00:41:53.963 –> 00:41:58.323
We’re all going into it maybe on different levels of the prerequisites.

00:41:58.323 –> 00:42:04.863
It’s, you know, one of my little unicorns that I want to take on my class is T is T Mac.

00:42:05.043 –> 00:42:10.343
I want to take his class and he’s, he’s a huge baseline fundamentals guy. Yeah.

00:42:11.003 –> 00:42:16.983
He’s very intense. I mean, I’m, I can be kind of the alpha intense at times

00:42:16.983 –> 00:42:19.483
as well. Teaching. He’s intense.

00:42:19.903 –> 00:42:25.043
He’s on all the time, isn’t he? Yeah. He’s he’s yeah. He’s amazing.

00:42:25.383 –> 00:42:31.103
Background is just absolutely phenomenal. I have, you know, utmost respect for the guy.

00:42:31.203 –> 00:42:36.263
Yeah. And if I don’t, if I don’t respect the instructor, I kind of,

00:42:36.263 –> 00:42:37.743
that wall’s already put up.

00:42:37.903 –> 00:42:42.103
I took a Glock instructor course and the instructor was okay.

00:42:43.243 –> 00:42:47.503
Didn’t really control the class. You know, had one idiot in the class who was

00:42:47.503 –> 00:42:49.643
some quote unquote SWAT commander.

00:42:51.343 –> 00:42:56.243
Just unprofessional students. The instructor didn’t really control the situation.

00:42:56.243 –> 00:42:59.323
So I was like, eh, you know, it was a thousand rounds.

00:42:59.523 –> 00:43:02.423
It was a, you know, one week training class. I checked the block.

00:43:03.248 –> 00:43:07.448
My takeaways were fine just because I wasn’t going there to learn anything.

00:43:07.628 –> 00:43:10.528
I was going there to kind of check a block for an instructor.

00:43:10.788 –> 00:43:12.528
Sure. For a Glock side of things.

00:43:12.928 –> 00:43:16.428
So I got something out of it because I got trigger time. So that’s always a

00:43:16.428 –> 00:43:18.908
good thing. But yeah, you got to have professional instructors.

00:43:19.068 –> 00:43:24.188
And I’m not saying, oh, man, he dropped the F-bomb and, you know, he said this.

00:43:24.248 –> 00:43:30.968
And, you know, there’s a difference between professionalism and just straight up like snooty, snobby.

00:43:30.968 –> 00:43:34.168
Like yeah i am not i am not refined by

00:43:34.168 –> 00:43:37.028
any means you know 20 years in the marine corps

00:43:37.028 –> 00:43:41.508
around yeah you tend to

00:43:41.508 –> 00:43:44.768
be a little rough on the edges you know when i started in civilians that

00:43:44.768 –> 00:43:47.868
was one of the things i had to stop doing was right stop cussing

00:43:47.868 –> 00:43:50.668
stop making you know these these weird kind of

00:43:50.668 –> 00:43:53.748
jokes where you just get like people get in

00:43:53.748 –> 00:43:57.108
the audience and go oh that was weird awkward moment

00:43:57.108 –> 00:44:00.068
you know so they don’t get the humor but yeah yeah

00:44:00.068 –> 00:44:03.108
right so from my perspective it

00:44:03.108 –> 00:44:06.588
seems like you know like everyone every business you know firearms

00:44:06.588 –> 00:44:10.628
instructors are like any other business firearms trainings like any other business

00:44:10.628 –> 00:44:16.188
you know the social media outlets are on fire certainly a lot of blogs being

00:44:16.188 –> 00:44:20.588
written and otherwise so you know a lot of the instructors i’ve come about well

00:44:20.588 –> 00:44:23.928
i should say i’ve i’ve learned about just through you know know,

00:44:23.928 –> 00:44:26.428
whatever social media outlet there is.

00:44:26.508 –> 00:44:29.348
So that’s a good way to start discovering some of these guys.

00:44:29.828 –> 00:44:36.468
But it seems like the best way to learn about the classes and instruction themselves

00:44:36.468 –> 00:44:43.488
is over the course of, you know, reading things online, but word of mouth seems to be big too.

00:44:43.688 –> 00:44:47.368
There’s a lot of opinions offered up to your point. And then you kind of see

00:44:47.368 –> 00:44:48.448
enough of an individual.

00:44:48.548 –> 00:44:52.688
Once you start following them potentially on social media, you can kind of get

00:44:52.688 –> 00:44:56.488
a sense of their type of character and the types of things that they’re doing.

00:44:56.608 –> 00:44:59.268
So you got to kind of take all that into consideration.

00:45:00.268 –> 00:45:05.328
Yeah, it’s tough unless you have been to a class before. And I know guys that are,

00:45:06.093 –> 00:45:09.293
been in my classes, been to multiple classes that I’ve done.

00:45:09.473 –> 00:45:13.393
I’ve gone to some folks multiple times just because I’ve enjoyed the class.

00:45:13.633 –> 00:45:17.533
And each time it’s being taught, you get a little bit different perspective

00:45:17.533 –> 00:45:18.673
or a little bit different tweak.

00:45:18.873 –> 00:45:25.053
You know, robotic instructors that teach a very strict curriculum and there’s no variation in that.

00:45:25.273 –> 00:45:28.533
I don’t think there’s a lot of depth to those types of instructors.

00:45:29.433 –> 00:45:34.173
You know, I like somebody that looks at the class as a whole and maybe make

00:45:34.173 –> 00:45:38.113
some changes to the class as a whole. So every class may be different.

00:45:38.353 –> 00:45:43.473
Every individual’s experience is going to be different, different perspectives.

00:45:43.693 –> 00:45:48.033
I know one guy that he came out and taught when the Marine Corps just first

00:45:48.033 –> 00:45:49.873
started up the MARSOC program.

00:45:50.133 –> 00:45:51.993
It was an experimental platoon.

00:45:52.273 –> 00:45:54.713
He came out. He was a Delta guy.

00:45:54.973 –> 00:45:58.093
I’m not going to drop his name because I just don’t see a point to it.

00:45:58.233 –> 00:46:01.733
He was a Delta guy, well-known back then. He’s well-known now.

00:46:02.333 –> 00:46:05.353
I know some of them, and he was professional when he came out and talked,

00:46:05.453 –> 00:46:07.993
because I was one of the SVTG instructors back then.

00:46:08.253 –> 00:46:12.813
I never had an issue with a guy, and I know several people now in the past couple

00:46:12.813 –> 00:46:16.913
of years that have been to one of their classes and said it was absolutely atrocious.

00:46:16.973 –> 00:46:21.913
It was more about him, focus on him, let’s watch him shoot, let’s watch him tell stories.

00:46:22.753 –> 00:46:26.333
And, you know, when you get some of the students, they just like suck up to that.

00:46:26.453 –> 00:46:31.353
And I’m like, dude, I don’t idolize anybody. anybody that’s you know that’s

00:46:31.353 –> 00:46:35.853
a false idol in my opinion that’s i can respect you but you know you tell me

00:46:35.853 –> 00:46:41.053
a cool story about you know how you did this or did that i’m not there to kind of.

00:46:41.688 –> 00:46:45.248
You know, kind of suck up to you. You know, I’m not, yeah, we can be friends

00:46:45.248 –> 00:46:49.148
on Facebook. That’s cool. But you know, I’m, I’m here to learn some, teach me something.

00:46:49.228 –> 00:46:53.208
I don’t, I don’t care that you were the first guy down the rope and whatever

00:46:53.208 –> 00:46:57.108
operation over these, you know, that to me is, that’s great.

00:46:57.148 –> 00:47:00.968
But how does that apply to me? Your stories are anecdotal. I’m here to learn

00:47:00.968 –> 00:47:04.068
how to shoot better and get some, get some range time.

00:47:04.168 –> 00:47:07.508
Otherwise this isn’t worth my time. And more importantly, my money.

00:47:07.848 –> 00:47:14.108
So you want, you want to stand up on a pedestal and tell stories and let’s pay

00:47:14.108 –> 00:47:18.528
for a speech seminar, not a, not a training seminar. Right. Right.

00:47:18.828 –> 00:47:25.168
So my thought, and when you’re seeking instruction and training courses is I

00:47:25.168 –> 00:47:30.108
think it’s important for the student or the prospective student to have a goal in mind,

00:47:30.128 –> 00:47:35.408
or if they’ve got more than one great, But have a goal in mind so that you know

00:47:35.408 –> 00:47:39.588
the types of training and maybe that’ll better suit you to the instructor you’re

00:47:39.588 –> 00:47:43.508
looking at or you need to find one that you think will better align with what

00:47:43.508 –> 00:47:46.368
your overall goal or goals are for that training.

00:47:46.608 –> 00:47:49.388
And then be realistic about what your goals are.

00:47:49.508 –> 00:47:53.008
If you’re new to firearms, don’t think that you’re going to go in there Call

00:47:53.008 –> 00:47:57.408
of Duty style with your AK or your AR and shoot up the place.

00:47:57.408 –> 00:48:01.288
You need to dial it back and learn that there is a process and you’ve got to

00:48:01.288 –> 00:48:02.528
get good with the fundamentals.

00:48:02.928 –> 00:48:06.968
So you need to have a goal in mind. And that’s part of being able to find the

00:48:06.968 –> 00:48:10.328
right instructors and training courses, too.

00:48:10.788 –> 00:48:16.468
Yeah, you’ve got to find a course that is going to fit what you’re looking for. Yeah.

00:48:16.528 –> 00:48:21.508
You know, if you’re showing up with no kit, nothing, you know,

00:48:21.508 –> 00:48:25.688
just a gun, a holster, a couple of magazines or heck, you don’t even have a

00:48:25.688 –> 00:48:29.568
magazine pouch and you’re sticking them in your your your shirt pocket.

00:48:29.568 –> 00:48:33.848
Yeah, that’s good enough for like a level one, just, you know,

00:48:33.848 –> 00:48:37.048
baseline fundamentals, just getting some trigger time, you know,

00:48:37.048 –> 00:48:38.328
mastering those fundamentals.

00:48:38.508 –> 00:48:44.288
But, you know, if you show up in full blown kit and you’re confusing the whole

00:48:44.288 –> 00:48:48.308
overall course because you’ve got so much crap going on,

00:48:48.428 –> 00:48:52.548
you’re not getting as much out of it if you strip all that crap off.

00:48:52.548 –> 00:48:54.588
And the same goes the other way around.

00:48:54.628 –> 00:48:59.068
If you’re taking an advanced level course and you’ve got to you’ve got to transition

00:48:59.068 –> 00:49:03.668
from your rifle to your handgun and you’ve got to be able to do speed reloads

00:49:03.668 –> 00:49:09.788
and tack reloads and you show up with a handgun with no mag pouches and a rifle

00:49:09.788 –> 00:49:12.348
and no sling. And I mean, yeah.

00:49:12.468 –> 00:49:18.208
So when you’re looking at training courses and instructors, because it’s twofold,

00:49:18.268 –> 00:49:20.788
it’s one may not relate to the other.

00:49:20.828 –> 00:49:26.028
So you may find a training course that you’re looking for because it’s got the curriculum you want.

00:49:26.208 –> 00:49:31.588
And but it may not be the instructor personality and the instructor that you’re looking for.

00:49:32.506 –> 00:49:38.846
You know, what takes priority. I think curriculum is good with a good instructor.

00:49:39.586 –> 00:49:44.946
Good curriculum with a bad instructor is bad curriculum.

00:49:45.306 –> 00:49:53.246
So the instructor is the key, in my opinion, to you can it could be some really

00:49:53.246 –> 00:49:58.246
fun, cool stuff, like take a three gun, learn how to do a three gun class,

00:49:58.246 –> 00:50:00.026
a shotgun, rifle and handgun.

00:50:00.026 –> 00:50:03.146
And the instructor would be absolutely horrible.

00:50:03.486 –> 00:50:08.106
And you just leave that class and you’re more confused about three gunning than

00:50:08.106 –> 00:50:10.326
you were when you signed up for the class.

00:50:11.346 –> 00:50:15.706
So it’s a relationship, absolutely. And it’s a three-way relationship,

00:50:15.946 –> 00:50:18.706
the curriculum, the instructor, and the student.

00:50:19.006 –> 00:50:26.146
And bad students can make a course very uncomfortable and really hinder the

00:50:26.146 –> 00:50:29.726
course because that means the instructor either is –

00:50:30.026 –> 00:50:34.786
not controlling his class, not controlling what is going on,

00:50:34.866 –> 00:50:39.086
or he’s so focused on what stupidity is.

00:50:39.146 –> 00:50:43.286
And I hate to say stupidity because it just may be a student that showed up

00:50:43.286 –> 00:50:46.026
that was not prepared for the class properly, mentally, physically,

00:50:46.346 –> 00:50:48.266
with the prerequisites.

00:50:48.306 –> 00:50:54.246
And all of a sudden he stops teaching 10 people to focus on one person for the next hour.

00:50:54.746 –> 00:50:59.646
That’s 10 people People that are not getting their money’s worth, in my opinion.

00:51:00.366 –> 00:51:04.626
Right. So there’s a balance. You can’t have it extreme.

00:51:05.006 –> 00:51:08.366
You know, and I’ve had students where I’ve said, you know what?

00:51:08.886 –> 00:51:13.666
This is not for you. I will refund your money. You can come back at a later time.

00:51:13.866 –> 00:51:18.726
Most instructors won’t ever refund your money. Most big courses, they just, they won’t.

00:51:18.806 –> 00:51:22.366
Because there’s too many things going on. They have to pay for a hotel,

00:51:22.586 –> 00:51:25.826
pay for a flight, pay for the range, pay for this, pay for that.

00:51:25.826 –> 00:51:30.226
So they believe they’ve invested in it. They’ve done their work.

00:51:30.586 –> 00:51:35.006
You didn’t do your legwork. Right. You know, come back at a later time kind of thing.

00:51:35.126 –> 00:51:39.006
And I’ve told several students that that is this is just not for you.

00:51:39.206 –> 00:51:41.866
And I’ve had also had several students saying, you know what,

00:51:41.926 –> 00:51:47.406
I really honestly don’t think the bottom arm is for you because I don’t think you were mentally.

00:51:48.477 –> 00:51:55.317
Prepared to have a firearm in your hand because everything you do is dangerous everything,

00:51:56.097 –> 00:51:58.997
that you know every every time you touch it

00:51:58.997 –> 00:52:01.917
your brain your frontal lobe just shuts down

00:52:01.917 –> 00:52:04.837
right you’re not ready you know you don’t if

00:52:04.837 –> 00:52:07.637
i ask you one plus one and you won’t even be able

00:52:07.637 –> 00:52:10.437
to answer that because your brain is completely shut down yeah that

00:52:10.437 –> 00:52:13.197
is not the time to be having a handgun in your in your hand

00:52:13.197 –> 00:52:16.297
or firearm or be around them period so

00:52:16.297 –> 00:52:19.537
you know i i think the advantage for students

00:52:19.537 –> 00:52:23.257
though over instructors is that a student can

00:52:23.257 –> 00:52:28.077
and should be reviewing and researching who they take a training course from

00:52:28.077 –> 00:52:32.917
the instructors don’t have that opportunity with their students right they’re

00:52:32.917 –> 00:52:37.357
not running background checks they don’t have a really solid way of verifying

00:52:37.357 –> 00:52:42.277
their skill set and knowledge and experience up to that point where they come to class.

00:52:42.737 –> 00:52:46.917
So yeah, that’s the disadvantage the instructor has. And a bad student like

00:52:46.917 –> 00:52:49.137
that can make it bad for everyone in class.

00:52:49.457 –> 00:52:53.457
But I think it’s safe to say for students that are looking for training that

00:52:53.457 –> 00:52:56.077
they should do their like anything else these days.

00:52:56.177 –> 00:52:58.937
The interwebs makes it super convenient.

00:52:59.097 –> 00:53:02.917
Should do your research, check out the instructor, check out the classes,

00:53:03.117 –> 00:53:07.817
check out reviews, blogs, whatever, social media followings, etc..

00:53:08.507 –> 00:53:12.587
Do your research and just know that, you know, you may choose a class,

00:53:12.607 –> 00:53:16.447
a training course and, you know, show up and go through the course.

00:53:16.507 –> 00:53:20.687
And it may take you going through a course or two to decide that wasn’t the

00:53:20.687 –> 00:53:22.207
type of training that I was looking for.

00:53:22.287 –> 00:53:26.247
That’s not the type of course I want to do in the future. So just know,

00:53:26.307 –> 00:53:30.427
you know, there’s no way to really know until you’ve gotten there and gone through it.

00:53:30.487 –> 00:53:33.187
So just know that might be part of the process for you, too.

00:53:33.287 –> 00:53:36.427
But at least have some goals in mind. Be realistic. and

00:53:36.427 –> 00:53:39.547
when you do get in class keep keep keep

00:53:39.547 –> 00:53:42.767
it safe yeah you got to do your due diligence

00:53:42.767 –> 00:53:45.487
yeah that way and the other thing there’s there’s no

00:53:45.487 –> 00:53:49.467
guarantees that it’s going to be a good experience or a bad experience there’s

00:53:49.467 –> 00:53:54.047
just absolutely not because yeah anything can happen but you got to think it

00:53:54.047 –> 00:53:58.667
big time overall investment because it’s not cheap to get training especially

00:53:58.667 –> 00:54:04.087
if you’re going outside the local your local range or local uh facilities because

00:54:04.087 –> 00:54:05.587
you know you’re talking You’re talking gas,

00:54:05.807 –> 00:54:08.987
you’re talking time away from work, possibly you’re talking flights,

00:54:09.207 –> 00:54:10.867
you’re talking hotel, ammo.

00:54:11.727 –> 00:54:16.187
You know, gear maintenance, all these things prerequisite that may require you

00:54:16.187 –> 00:54:22.567
to have other stuff that you typically don’t have readily available to you. Yeah.

00:54:23.267 –> 00:54:28.367
Yeah. So there’s you have to do due diligence on yourself, you know,

00:54:28.367 –> 00:54:30.747
and as well as those courses.

00:54:30.767 –> 00:54:33.627
And there’s there’s a lot out there is a lot of really good stuff out there.

00:54:33.667 –> 00:54:38.127
I’ve seen some really scary stuff just because it looks cool.

00:54:38.227 –> 00:54:41.807
Yeah. You know, I’ve watched some videos of some training classes. Yeah.

00:54:41.927 –> 00:54:47.267
Stuff. I don’t really know how dangerous certain things are around,

00:54:47.427 –> 00:54:51.907
you know, well-trained people. Yep. I’ve sat in a room.

00:54:52.627 –> 00:54:57.067
You know, obviously body armor and a helmet on is a quote unquote hostage during

00:54:57.067 –> 00:55:03.407
a live fire, you know, training class for four, three comp platoon clearing a shoot house.

00:55:03.587 –> 00:55:06.667
And I’m sitting in the middle of a room and they’re shooting targets all around me.

00:55:06.727 –> 00:55:12.447
I would never do that with anybody that I personally hadn’t trained because

00:55:12.447 –> 00:55:14.307
I know who the idiots are.

00:55:14.427 –> 00:55:17.667
I know who the good guys are. I know who I trust and who I don’t trust.

00:55:17.667 –> 00:55:21.667
And I see some crazy stuff on the instructor side, just because it’s cool,

00:55:21.827 –> 00:55:27.487
just because it’s trendy, just because, oh, I’m the only one in town that’s doing this. Yeah.

00:55:27.747 –> 00:55:31.567
And the one time you have an accident, it’s going to cost somebody their life.

00:55:31.667 –> 00:55:35.147
You know, it’s like the guy, remember the video, the guy and the kid in the wheelchair?

00:55:35.587 –> 00:55:38.267
Great on that kid for getting out there, getting on the range,

00:55:38.387 –> 00:55:40.087
shooting. That was awesome.

00:55:40.187 –> 00:55:45.827
But the facilities did not suit his capabilities because the range was covered

00:55:45.827 –> 00:55:47.847
in brass and rocks and everything else.

00:55:47.967 –> 00:55:51.007
And they’re trying to shoot on the move. And they’ve got this kid shooting on

00:55:51.007 –> 00:55:52.927
the move, trying to do it by himself.

00:55:53.087 –> 00:55:57.027
Wait, so if you’ve ever ridden in a wheelchair before, you can’t really,

00:55:57.087 –> 00:56:01.427
you know, move a wheelchair forward with one hand on gravel.

00:56:01.587 –> 00:56:05.267
Really doesn’t work that way. You know, and they’ve got an instructor behind

00:56:05.267 –> 00:56:08.987
him, like pushing him and the instructor is even pushing him like sideways and

00:56:08.987 –> 00:56:10.567
all sorts of things, not purposely.

00:56:10.827 –> 00:56:15.327
He’s shooting all over the place and he’s 10 yards away and students are the

00:56:15.327 –> 00:56:16.867
rest of the students already downrange.

00:56:17.067 –> 00:56:21.767
I’m like, yeah, that’s that’s like number one. Yeah, that’s that’s experience

00:56:21.767 –> 00:56:25.707
level guys like high level experience guys being downrange while people are

00:56:25.707 –> 00:56:29.487
shooting. Bad things can happen. So you got to filter.

00:56:30.127 –> 00:56:35.947
And sometimes your takeaway is, hey, great. It was trigger time. It was an experience.

00:56:36.647 –> 00:56:40.647
I’m not going back. Or it was such an amazing force.

00:56:41.087 –> 00:56:45.887
I want to go back. That was awesome. I want to learn more. I would say that

00:56:45.887 –> 00:56:51.847
we’ve had a good chit-chat overall again, covering the topic of firearms training and seeking it out.

00:56:51.907 –> 00:56:56.127
So the takeaway is that especially if you’re looking to carry defensively or

00:56:56.127 –> 00:56:59.847
use a firearm defensively, you definitely need to go get some training for yourself.

00:57:00.067 –> 00:57:03.127
And if you take nothing else away from this, that should be it.

00:57:03.387 –> 00:57:06.387
Well, listen, Van, it was good to have you back on again. I appreciate your

00:57:06.387 –> 00:57:09.907
time, especially on a Saturday morning, again, eating into some of that personal

00:57:09.907 –> 00:57:13.967
time. but I appreciate you being here and really thank you.

00:57:14.067 –> 00:57:19.287
Thanks Jim for having me. I appreciate it. Yep. And we’ll talk to you soon. Okay. Take care.

00:57:20.560 –> 00:57:38.539
Music.

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