Cowboybootnut
Member
Spend $1000 or more on a brand new gun. Consider the conversation you will have with your wife or S/O about your new purchase. Go to gun range.
LFI-IV is where we "go beyond the envelope." It was here that we injected people with epinephrine and monitored their vital signs as they shot double speed to replicate full-blown fight or flight response in 1998.
I think sim drills are of more use if you've gone through a period of competing and learned high-stress gun-handling. That allows you to concentrate on the drill and keeping your mind working and not worry about the machinery. I've "killed" a lot of cops while they were playing with their guns.
White_Wolf said: The idea is not to learn how to function in a complex, well thought out manner under stress; it is to learn how to not be under stress in that situation.
Use pellet guns or .22 CB rounds?
I agree. The mental stress and sensory overload that occurs during life or death situations is very different than the physical stress that occurs as a result of exercise.I think it is worth considering that there is a big difference between the stress that can be generated in training and practice environments through physical exertion and that provoked in life and death circumstances.
Spend $1000 or more on a brand new gun. Consider the conversation you will have with your wife or S/O about your new purchase. Go to gun range.
So, what is the "right way" to train and use "stress/fear" to our SD advantage?you will always have stress/fear in certain situations,
If we train the right we, we can use that to our advantage.