Okay, I’m going WAY off subject here. But seeing Ben and Hwansik Kim tethered together sharing a set of earbuds just brings to mind either the spaghetti scene in Lady And The Tramp when they nibbled on the noodle until their mouths met or two high school sweethearts sharing a soda with two straws in a soda shoppe somewhere in small town U.S.A. In the 50’s. Too friggin’ cute! 🥰 Okay, back to the training talk!! 💪🏼😎
I struggled with the visual piece a million years ago when I was a shooter in a DA platoon. I got through it **despite** our training via will power, volume of rounds, relative youth benefit, and refusal to fail. Big targets, close distance, and slowing down is not what fixes that struggle. Chris and Matt are so spot on with this. The A zone ≠ a spot in the A zone and your shooting will show which you are looking at.
I thought I had a guy in my living the room the other night (false alarm I'm just paranoid) and I tell you, when you really think someone is there, its very tempting to look over the side of the gun instead of mounting the gun properly and utilizing the red dot. Very tempting and practical to just use the gun like a long stick that goes bang, if there is someone at close range who is a threat.
I use flash cards for targets to challenge myself. I agree, the A Zone is large. USPSA should give you more points for headshots. I can see why they don't though.
Okay, I’m going WAY off subject here. But seeing Ben and Hwansik Kim tethered together sharing a set of earbuds just brings to mind either the spaghetti scene in Lady And The Tramp when they nibbled on the noodle until their mouths met or two high school sweethearts sharing a soda with two straws in a soda shoppe somewhere in small town U.S.A. In the 50’s. Too friggin’ cute! 🥰 Okay, back to the training talk!! 💪🏼😎
I struggled with the visual piece a million years ago when I was a shooter in a DA platoon. I got through it **despite** our training via will power, volume of rounds, relative youth benefit, and refusal to fail. Big targets, close distance, and slowing down is not what fixes that struggle. Chris and Matt are so spot on with this. The A zone ≠ a spot in the A zone and your shooting will show which you are looking at.
I thought I had a guy in my living the room the other night (false alarm I'm just paranoid) and I tell you, when you really think someone is there, its very tempting to look over the side of the gun instead of mounting the gun properly and utilizing the red dot. Very tempting and practical to just use the gun like a long stick that goes bang, if there is someone at close range who is a threat.
I use flash cards for targets to challenge myself. I agree, the A Zone is large. USPSA should give you more points for headshots. I can see why they don't though.
💯