Hello all, here is today's article posted on TheArmoryLife.com. It is titled “Losing a Gunfight: Are You Behind the Power Curve?” and can be found at https://www.thearmorylife.com/losing-a-gunfight-are-you-behind-the-power-curve/.


PERFECT practice makes PERFECT. Imperfect practice... not so successful.Pretty straight forward. Practice makes perfect.
I've heard it said that if you're in a gunfight, you've already lost. I'm a firm believer in the axiom that the best gunfight is the one I never have.I’ve never lost a gunfight.![]()
I practice my draw daily as well.I've heard it said that if you're in a gunfight, you've already lost. I'm a firm believer in the axiom that the best gunfight is the one I never have.
That said, I arrive at my office early every morning. First one in the building. And every morning, I unload my CCW and practice drawing from the holster, aligning my sights with a clear target (aim small, miss small) and pulling the trigger. I reset the trigger and go again. I generally do 5 reps at a "far" target (Ipad hanging on the wall about 15-20 yards away) and another 5 reps at a short range target (nametag outside an office at 3-5 yards). In the first four reps, I'm deliberate, thinking through all the steps, and reciting a rule of firearm safety with each one. On the fifth rep, I put it all together and go. If I don't get it "right" - i.e., holster cleared with no snags, smooth presentation, iron sights on target, trigger pressed, not jerked - I call it good. If not, I go again until it is (good).
I don't know how anyone who carries a gun expects to get it into a fight quickly without doing something similar. It's difficult enough to shoot well and shoot accurately... to stack a decision to shoot, followed by draw and presentation up beforehand and still do the shooting part well? Perfect practice makes perfect, indeed.
I’ve never lost a gunfight.![]()
I'd lose quickly, i never shoot a gunI’ve never lost a gunfight.![]()