Why I Love my Country

I am in school right now working towards my degree. I’m taking English Composition where we are studying arguments. This week’s assignment was to argue why you are a patriot. I had to think long and hard about this one, because even though I do love my country, I had to decide why and try to put it into words. I know I talk about our government a lot and what those in power do angers me often, but do know this: I love my country; there is no other country like this on Earth. The people of the United States of America may be divided on most of the issues that affect us, but when national tragedy strikes, we are no longer Republicans or Democrats, Northerners or Southerners, Coloradoans or New Yorkers; we are Americans and we are united. I love this country because our founding fathers gave us rights that many other countries dream about, many of which “shall not be infringed” (U.S. Const. amend. II). In many other countries, guns are banned. In many other countries, you could be killed in the street for just voicing your opinion. In many other countries, you are forced into an arranged marriage, or you must marry within your caste. This is not so in my country.
I also love this land. We have the opportunity to live in a country that has rocky beaches, sandy beaches, island paradises, mountains, rain forests, plains, and arctic tundras. Not many other countries can boast this many different landscapes in one country.
My country is not perfect. Those who are leading our country are certainly not perfect, and I would like to see many changes made in how this country is run. But this is my country, and I will do what I can to defend her and to assure her future for my children and grandchildren.

SHOT Show

Glock
As expected, SHOT show was incredible. It’s very hard to try to describe to someone who hasn’t been there, but I’ll try! It started out with Media Day at the Range in Boulder City. Unfortunately, I missed it because of my 9 to 5 job. We flew in on Tuesday, which was the first day of the actual show. We went on Wednesday, which incidentally was the day the President announced his 23 executive orders for gun control. People asked me if the mood at the show was affected, and it really wasn’t. There was talk about it, of course, but it still was a very upbeat show. Everyone was thrilled to be with 60,000 other gun people, and the networking ability was great. We saw the Law Enforcement section first, which was a lot of fun, and not as overwhelming. We didn’t even realize how big the show was until we found the main room. The main room was unbelievable! The large manufacturers did not have a booth; they had a full store-sized display of their latest and greatest. I have to guess that Glock’s area alone was about 600 square feet, about the size of my old apartment! We did the ADD style of the SHOT show; “Oh look! Smith and Wesson! Lets go over there! Oh, we should go see 5.11! Let’s go see Remington’s new guns!” FYI, this is not a very efficient way to do SHOT! There were 12.5 miles of exhibits, and over 2 days, we probably saw 80% of them. On our second day, there were protesters outside the convention center. All three of them! It was actually pretty funny.
There were a lot of celebrities there as well. I got to meet a few of the Top Shot competitors, including Gabby Franco, Michelle Viscusi, Greg Littlejohn, Terry Vaughn, and Dustin Ellerman, who won season 4. They were all awesome, I got pictures with all of them. I also had the honor of meeting Kim Rhode, our olympic champion in skeet. She was wonderful, when I asked to get a picture with her, she immediately grabbed her London gold medal and put it around my neck and I got a picture with her and her medal.
Something that I was impressed with at the show was all the women who work for the manufacturers. Serious sales-women, not just women all dressed up in club-wear trying to lure men to their booths. There were a couple of those, of course, but not nearly as many as I expected. It gives me hope that the boys club that is the gun community is beginning to let more and more women in and we are starting to be treated as equals. There were also several female gun organizations represented, and after I do a little more research, I will give you some more information.
SHOT was amazing, the next time I go (and there WILL be a next time) I will definitely go to Media Day at the Range. Imagine all those new guns that were inside, but you actually get to shoot them!
Want to see pictures? Check out my Facebook page, I posted a lot of them there.

Gun Control Means Having a Good Grip

I wanted to take a moment and put in my two cents on the major shift in the anti-gun rhetoric since the tragedy in Connecticut. Unfortunately our country has become divided in yet another issue. Obviously I am widely against more gun control; more gun control will not stop these senseless shootings. Do you really think these psychopaths that are killing innocent and unarmed people will stop if there are more gun laws? Do you think they won’t be able to get guns illegally? Even if (and this is a big if) criminals couldn’t get guns anymore, they would find another way to spread chaos. The same day as the shooting in Connecticut, a man walked into a school in China with a knife and stabbed 20 children.

I actually do agree with one gun control law that should be passed. I feel that the gun show loop-hole needs to be closed. For those of you who don’t know what that is, the gun show loop-hole means anyone can walk into a gun show with a gun slung on his or her back with a sign that says “for sale.” Someone can walk up and buy the gun without a background check. Now as a responsible gun owner, I will not sell a gun to anyone without a background check, unless I know the person and trust that person. Not all gun owners feel that way though, and many guns get sold without background checks. By closing the gun show loop-hole, it could stop people who are ineligible to own guns from easily buying guns at a gun show.

At this point, the liberal media has whipped the anti-gun rhetoric into a frenzy. It is very rare that you hear about a gun saving a life in the national news. Did you hear that an undercover police officer in San Antonio stopped another possible movie theater shooting? Probably not. The main thing fueling the fire within the media and Washington DC is fear. People fear what they don’t understand. The liberal media and the anti-gunners in Washington don’t understand the gun community whatsoever and have no interest in sitting down and learning a little something. They think that a concealed weapons permit holder is liable to just whip out their gun whenever they are in a small altercation because they are pissed off. They also don’t understand the guns themselves. Have you seen some of the things Dianne Feinstein wants to ban? The one that I really don’t understand is front pistol grips on the AR-15. Because by having a front pistol grip, you can kill a lot more people if you don’t have one. Oh wait, that’s right, a front grip has nothing to do with the power of the rifle! It’s ergonomically more comfortable for people who prefer it, and can actually give you more control over your firearm. Doesn’t more control mean it would be safer? So to Senator Feinstein and all the others who want to ban our guns, please take the time to learn about the equipment you are trying to ban, but most of all, talk to the people it would affect the most: the American people.

Why I love Colorado

I recently came back from a trip to the east coast. I was there to see my cousin graduate from high school. My aunt, uncle and cousin live in Washington DC, so we spend a few days there and then went down to Atlantic City for a couple days. We had a wonderful time, but spending some time out east made me appreciate home. Don’t get me wrong, the east coast is beautiful, and Washington DC is amazing and full of history, but it’s a different world out there.
I haven’t been to DC in about 15 years. When you’ve been somewhere as a kid, then you go back as an adult, it’s like the first time, because you have a completely different perspective. The first thing that struck me was how claustrophobic that city is. There are a lot of people, in a very small area, compared to where I live, in Colorado Springs, Colorado, where we’re very spread out. It was a little uncomfortable, but it wasn’t the biggest culture shock…
The biggest culture shock about Washington DC was their gun laws. Pretty much take all of Colorado gun laws, and turn them up-side down. It’s basically full of CAN’T's. You can’t apply for any type of permit or license to carry a gun. You can’t have a “high capacity” magazine (more than 10 cartridges). You can’t have a fully automatic firearm or suppressors (aka, any fun). You can’t have a taser or stun-gun. And finally, the only way you can transport a gun through Washington DC is unloaded, and neither the gun nor the ammo can be accessible to the passenger compartment.
When people live in an environment with their gun freedoms suppressed like this, they become ignorant about guns, because people assume if the government restricts guns, guns must be evil. They have no idea of the rich gun community in other parts of the country. They don’t understand how the sport enriches people’s lives, young and old. I was at the range with A Girl and A Gun the other day, and I watched a 7 year old girl fall in love with shooting, and see her confidence grow with every shot. I feel sorry for those who cannot see past the anti-gun rhetoric, but I have to admit, it does make me proud to live in a state like Colorado.

Gun Colors: Are You Traditional or Unconventional?

There have been a lot of heated debates within the gun community about colored guns. I’ve seen guns in all colors of the rainbow, but especially pink. Let me make one thing clear: I am not a “pink” kind of girl, but I’m not a tomboy. I love my makeup (I actually sell Mary Kay on the side), I love to get all dolled up, and I LOVE shoes. So I consider myself a typical girl, except when it comes to my guns.

One major issue I have with colored guns is they tend to look like toys. This may not be an issue when there are only adults around, but what if a kid finds a blue or a pink gun? If a child hasn’t been educated about guns, they may not understand the difference between a toy gun, guns on TV or in video games, and real guns. One of the worst tragedies occurs when a child hurts or kills himself or a friend with a gun. This crime is completely avoidable, and is pure negligence on the parent’s part.

Another reason I don’t like colored guns came from a friend of mine. She is also an NRA Certified Pistol instructor. She told me, she doesn’t want to pull out a pink gun on an aggressor just to have him laugh in her face. Granted, even if the gun is pink and he laughs at her, all she has to do is pull the trigger to make him stop laughing.  She likes the intimidation factor of a black gun.

My last reason may be egotistical, but this whole article is my opinion after all. I don’t like colored guns because I don’t feel like I need a different gun just because I’m a woman. I can shoot with the best of them, and I don’t need the boys on the range snickering as I pull out a pink Hello Kitty Glock. I express my femininity in my life outside of shooting. When I’m trying to fit in a male-dominated sport, I do everything I can to be accepted. This means carrying my black range back with my black Glock or bi-tone Springfield XD, wearing my combat boots and tactical pants, and wearing very little makeup since it gets messed up anyway with the ear and eye protection and my baseball hat.

Feel free to comment with your opinions since you’ve just read mine!

Women shooters in the perspective of Massad Ayoob.

I started this blog to support women marksmen and to show the world what we are capable of. I am a little biased, after all, I am a woman marksman. Most of what you hear in support of women marksmen around the “blogosphere” is from other women. When I came across this article by Massad Ayoob, I was inspired.  Finally an article from a male marksman about women marksmen! Massad Ayoob is a very well respected firearms instructor who has written many books about firearms instruction, and writes articles for  many gun magazines. I hope you enjoy his article as much as I did.

“In a time when what used to be called “the women’s liberation movement” has achieved many of its goals in terms of equality and empowerment, the concept that guns are somehow evil icons of male brutality has managed to survive as the longest-standing relic of the old “Suzie Housewife mentality.”

Political enfranchisement? Of course! Entry into previously male-exclusive job markets? A done deal, for the most part. Economic power and self-determination? You bet.

But defend yourself and your loved ones against a deadly criminal, by resorting to a gun of your own? “OMG!!! You’re just surrendering to the brutal male mentality!” If I may say so in a family magazine…What A Crock!

The attitude part

In almost thirty years of teaching female armed citizens, and longer than that teaching female cops, I’ve come to the conclusion that once you get past old-fashioned cultural predispositioning, women may actually be better and more decisive students of the gun.

You don’t jump up on a chair and shriek when you see a mouse in the kitchen? You don’t exclaim, “I declare! I do believe I have a case of the vapors coming on,” and faint when there’s trouble? Good—indications are that you’re on the way to getting past the cultural canard that women are supposed to be helpless and totally reliant on men to protect them.

Most firearms instructors agree that women have a faster learning curve than men in this discipline. They tend to have better fine motor coordination, as a rule, and pulling a trigger without deviating the muzzle off target is most definitely a fine motor skill. Their biggest advantage is that they are not born believing that because of their gender, they automatically know how to do something masculine. I’ve found that the female student more than the male wants to know, not just “how do you do that?” but “why do you do it that way?” With a proper explanation, she follows instructions, finds the results good, and moves on. With some of the males—not all, certainly, but some—the reaction is, “Ungawa! If Mongo do what instructor say, Mongo become ‘beta’ and instructor become ‘alpha.’ I, MONGO, am alpha! Mongo must keep doing it Mongo’s way! Ungawa!” It’s like de-programming cult victims sometimes…

There is a misperception that women won’t have the intestinal fortitude to pull the trigger when it’s necessary. That’s only true with an armed female who has bought into the “jump-on-the-chair-when-you-see-a-mouse” mentality. The female of the species, once she understands the situation, has no illusions that she’s supposed to kick the knife out of the attacker’s hand, or knock him unconscious with a right cross like the Lone Ranger. She’s less likely to hesitate. An outdoorswoman who is hunting to feed her family is not going to break down in weepy-eye flashbacks to Walt Disney’s film Bambi when the venison is in her sights; she’s going to hold her aim steady, and smoothly press the trigger back.


This Sabre Defense AR15 carbine has its collapsible stock closed, for its smallest-stature user…

 


… and now the stock is extended for a user with long arms. This type of stock adapts the gun to all sizes of family members.

As I’ve watched women train over the years, I’ve seen other differences compared to the men. When the guys shoot a qualification, there’s (usually good-natured) teasing. “Hey, Buddy, ya dropped a point there! I’m ahead of you so far!” When the gals do the same, particularly in an all-female class, the difference is stark. The theme is mutual support: “You’re doing great, Sylvia! You’re only one point down! You go, girl!”

The hardware

Most guns were designed by men, for men. The “pull” measurement (the distance between butt and trigger on a rifle or shotgun) will, in standard models, be designed for an average-size adult male. That means they may fit a tall woman. A lady of average height, or one of more petite proportions, will have to lean back off balance to hold it to her shoulder to aim.

The gunstock can be customized by a gunsmith (or by an individual who is really handy with tools and really knows the gun in question). Or, in many cases, it can simply be ordered with a “youth stock.”

 

Why, you may ask, don’t they ever call it a “women’s stock?” Ah, a topic opens here. We are a nation that tries to put racism behind it, and can’t quite achieve that. We are a nation that would probably like to put misogyny behind it, but can’t achieve that, either. Historically and culturally, the gun has been perceived as a “male only” object. And frankly, in many respects, a male-only totem. How many young boys with even a hint of machismo about them would want a first-time hunting rifle or shotgun with a “women’s stock” for Christmas? On the other hand, many slender women have grown accustomed to buying practical jeans in “boys’ sizes,” and more women have purchased sneakers or boots in “youth sizes,” too.

It’s a marketing thing.

If we can just set that part of it aside, the main point we take from it is: “youth stocks” fit smaller-statured people, among whom are a lot of women. Therefore, youth stocks are extremely useful for adapting shotguns and rifles to female shooters.

One of the little-recognized reasons why AR15 rifles have become so hugely popular in America—in the practical rural world as well as the defensive urban sector—is that, before the onerous Bill Clinton “Assault Weapons” Ban of 1994-2004, these guns could and now again can be had with telescoping stocks. The most common is the so-called “M4″ variety, which offers four positions, though you can get more options than that. The most petite female can shoulder, aim, and effectively fire an AR15 with the stock closed to its most “collapsed” point. Tall folks can still handle the rifle comfortably and effectively by simply pulling it all the way out to its maximum length.

This makes an AR15 with a telescoping stock a “family gun,” if you will. Momma Bear, Poppa Bear, and Baby Bear can all make it work if they know what to do with it, and in an instant can adjust the gun to fit them. We’re seeing similar telescoping stocks made available for shotguns such as that classic “backwoods home” scattergun, the Remington 870 slide action. We’re also seeing it available now for the popular Ruger Mini-14. It was not for nothing that one of the most popular models of Mini-14 was named by Ruger the “Ranch Rifle.” Adaptability is good. In a rural family setting, whether the gun is needed to put food on the table, keep the fox from the chicken coop, or repel the proverbial wolf from the door, a gun which responsible young people, petite moms, and burly dads can all use interchangeably makes a helluva lot of sense, in this observer’s opinion.

With handguns as well as rifles or shotguns, fit to the user is important. Nationwide, we’re seeing a huge increase in not only sales of pistols and revolvers, but applications for permits to carry them loaded and concealed in public. Quite apart from what it says about social trends and crime predictions, for the self-sufficient rural family the issue is that when you need a gun, you often need it now, and don’t have time to go back to the cabin, the tractor, or the horse to unlimber a long gun. A handgun on your hip or in your pocket is always with you.

The last time I saw someone threatened by a potentially lethal snake, there were lots of rifles and shotguns “available”… a hundred or more yards away. What was readily available was the 9mm Glock pistol holstered on my hip, which I used to blow the serpent’s brain out and end the fear.

Handguns—like long guns—tend to be designed and built “by fighting men, for fighting men.” If you look at the history of “fighting men” (more in the police service than in the military service, actually) you find that larger males were given preference over the smaller ones for certain duties. At the time little Audie Murphy became the most highly decorated soldier of WWII, there were many police departments back home that wouldn’t have hired him because he didn’t make the height and weight requirements. Read this late, great hero’s autobiography, To Hell and Back, and you’ll see that Murphy’s preferred fighting guns were the little M1 carbine (not to be confused with the much bigger, much more powerful M1 Garand rifle in caliber .30-06, which weighed nearly twice as much), and the Model 1911A1 pistol.

A “backwoods home” kind of kid, Audie Murphy had grown up feeding his family with animals he shot in the woods. He had become a deadly marksman. The little M1 carbine fit his small stature, and he littered the ground of Europe with German soldiers he killed with his. The M/1911A1 pistol had been redesigned from the original M/1911 after WWI to fit smaller hands, because in a time when the average male was smaller than males today, the first model’s trigger had been too long to reach effectively. Today, in a time when the average adult American male stands much taller than his counterpart in the year 1918 (thanks to better nutrition, better prenatal care, and similar factors), most makers of 1911-style pistols have gone back to the earlier, longer triggers. However, short 1911A1 triggers are still available, and they perfectly fit small hands with short fingers.

The dimension called “pull” factor on a rifle or shotgun is best described as “trigger reach” on a handgun. It is measured on the hand from the center of the web of the hand to the contact point of the finger on the trigger, and on the gun from the center of the curve of the trigger to the backstrap of the handgun’s frame. A person with large hands/long fingers can make do with a short-trigger-reach handgun, but a person with small hands/short fingers may not be able to get enough leverage on a gun that has a heavy pull and a long reach to even pull the trigger to make it fire.

Whether we’re talking rifle, shotgun, or handgun, one principle will hold true: the larger person can adapt to the smaller person’s gun better than the smaller person can adapt to the larger’s. I stand a more or less average 5’10″ tall; my significant other barely reaches five feet in height. If she uses MY shotgun, she has to cantilever her shoulders backwards to hold it up, which takes her off balance, and she simply won’t shoot it well. But if I take her youth-stock Remington 1100 semiautomatic shotgun, all I have to do is pull it in tighter to my shoulder, and I can run it just fine.

The bottom line is a simple one: make sure the firearm in question fits the smallest person authorized to use it, and the largest person in the family will be able to make do with it. The opposite is not true. (Yes, Audie Murphy won his Congressional Medal of Honor firing a humongous .50 caliber Browning M2 machinegun from the top of a burning tank destroyer. However, the built-in stand for the gun compensated for his compact physical size. Yes, Audie Murphy once wiped out a German staff car and all its occupants with a roughly 20-pound Browning Automatic Rifle he grabbed from a larger soldier as the vehicle loomed near…but neither you nor I are the reincarnation of Audie Murphy.)

Shooting techniques

Women tend to have less upper body strength and hand strength than men of the same height. That’s not an advantage, from the standpoint of shooting a gun effectively. The other side of the coin is that women tend to have a lower center of gravity than their brothers the same height, and pound for pound tend to be stronger from the waist down. This is why the twin sister beats the twin brother in something like “Indian leg wrestling,” and it’s why women need to pay more attention to shooting stance than men of the same size.

The stance—the body position when you fire the gun—requires upper body weight to be forward so it goes against the recoil force. The good news for the female shooter is that having that lower center of gravity and approximately 30 degrees more flexibility in the pelvic axis than a typical man of the same height, she can flex forward and get into the gun better, if she has just been taught to do it.

With rifle, shotgun, or handgun, if a 220-pound male body-builder with 7% body fat leans backward as he fires, the recoil force of the gun will cantilever him backward and send the muzzle jumping so high that the next shot might hit a duck in the air, but not a deer on the ground. However, if a 110-pound female shooter has her body weight maybe 60% onto a flexed forward leg, and is digging her rear heel into the ground with the rear leg’s knee just unlocked, and her upper body is forward of center, her body dynamics will almost instantly overcome the recoil force of the weapon and snap her gun back on target for an immediate second shot if that is necessary.

Physically small people with limited body strength who know how to use what they have to work with, will almost invariably outshoot big, strong people shooting with old-fashioned techniques. (Umm…did I mention Audie Murphy already?)

The proof is out there

Do a Google search of winners of National Championship rifle matches in the United States over the last several years. Your research will show you that a disproportionate number of the relatively few women who compete against men have won the overall National Championship titles. Rifle shooting involves firing from awkward positions, such as sitting. Female flexibility has an advantage here. We’ve talked about the fine motor skill factor, but consider also that little thing called “concentration,” which so many professional educators say favors the female over the male. Is concentration a factor in shooting well? Do bears go potty in the woods?

Shotguns? One name for you: Kim Rhode. This young woman has for many years been America’s superstar in Olympic shotgun shooting.

Handguns? Go to a top-level “practical pistol competition” and shoot against Jessica Abbate, Julie Goloski-Golob, Randi Rogers, or Laura Torres-Reyes. If you beat them, get back to me and then talk about “natural male superiority,” Testosterone Boy.

The bottom line

For God’s sake, people, we’ve seen the role models here, in the pages of Backwoods Home Magazine, over many years. Jackie Clay takes her Winchester Model 94 .30-30, the quintessential deer rifle, into the woods and shoots a white-tail, cleans the carcass, and takes it home and butchers it into steaks and chops and stew and burgers with which to feed her family.

Annie Tuttle, our editor at Backwoods Home, not only takes over from The Patriarch and runs the whole damn magazine, but makes sure that she and her babies are safe at home while her husband serves his country overseas in the United States Armed Forces. Her home protection system goes up to and includes a Springfield Armory SOCOM-16, short enough for a petite female to handle with aplomb, and chambered for 7.62mm NATO, deadly enough to do a remarkably convincing imitation of what Audie Murphy did to that WWII Nazi vehicle and every enemy combatant on board, with a Browning Automatic Rifle. If any violent home invaders attempt to intrude on this little mother’s nest of babies, I know the attackers’ autopsy reports will be ugly to read, but my own final assessment would be “Cause of Death of Intruders: Sudden and Acute Failure of the Victim Selection Process.”

The lioness is often more formidable than the lion. No instinct is stronger than that of mother protecting child. There is nothing unfeminine about strength and empowerment. One of the best informational resources I can recommend for either gender is http://www.corneredcat.com, by the formidable Kathy Jackson. Armed and Female by Paxton Quigley is another great read, and Gila Hayes’ new book, Personal Defense for Women came out last fall.”

Thank you, Mr. Ayoob, for seeing the potential in women and supporting us!

 You check out more about Massad Ayoob at his website: www.massadayoobgroup.com. This article came from this website: http://www.backwoodshome.com/articles2/ayoob121.html.

 

 

Did you get your Starbucks today?

Today, Valentine’s Day, the National Gun Victims Action Council tried to boycott Starbucks. The National Gun Victims Action Council, or NGAC, is an anti-gun organization supported by many religious and secular groups which is convinced that people who carry firearms either open or concealed are the cause of gun violence. They believe that by allowing people to carry guns into their businesses, it increases the chance of others being victimized. So they have been lobbying for restaurants to refuse to let people into their establishments who openly display their firearms. The NGAC decided by boycotting Starbucks, it would reduce Starbucks’ stock price by an amount that no rational company would allow. Why Starbucks? Because Starbucks refuses to discriminate against a certain class of customers as long as they are within state or federal law, and Starbucks understands that people who legally carry firearms are the LAST people who are the cause of gun crimes.

Here’s the funny thing about a boycott on an issue that divides our country almost in half: when one side boycotts a business, the other side rallies together to support the business.  All over my Facebook page today were my friends and family announcing that they had just gone to Starbucks. All over our facebook page, were people who don’t generally go to Starbucks, but because of this boycott, they went and got a hot chocolate (show me someone who doesn’t like hot chocolate!). My favorite part was seeing pictures of these people posted on Facebook enjoying their drink and their second amendment right at Starbucks. Every Starbucks I passed today was BUSY!  The anti-gun folks made it easier by boycotting in the winter, when it’s easier to conceal!

In closing, don’t take on the gun lovers of this country. When we band together, we are strong and unstoppable. Also, please forgive any run-on sentences, because I am still highly caffeinated. :)

From gun-shy to zombie slayer!

          As a gun enthusiast, one of my favorite activities is to go to the range. There are people out there who love guns, talk about guns constantly, know every gun manufacturer, model, and every type of ammunition out there, but they never go shooting! I may not know everything about every gun ever made, but I go to the range as often as I can to practice my skills. I also love to share my skills with others. I take a friend with me when I go, since shooting is so much more fun with friends!

          There was one time back in November when I had just returned from Frontsight Firearms Training Institute, and I wanted to practice the new skills I had learned. I was going to go with a friend, but she backed out at the last minute. The day before I was going to go to the range, I went out to lunch with another friend that used to work with me. She is a French expatriate who just got her US citizenship in 2010. We were chatting, and I told her I was going to go to the range the next day. She got all excited, and asked if she could come with me. I was happy to have the company, so I told her of course. I told her it was very fitting, and we could celebrate her first full year of citizenship by exercising her 2nd amendment right. She had never even touched a gun before, so I told her exactly how to dress (no v-neck shirts since women have natural hot-brass catchers on our chests) and that I’d pick her up the next day.

            We decided to go to lunch before we drove the hour to go to the range. At lunch, she was telling me how excited she was to finally shoot a gun. She told me that growing up in France, where guns are very restricted, she was always told that guns are evil, guns kill people, etc. So she actually had a fear of guns because of the how she was raised. So I asked her, if she was afraid of them, then why did she want to go shooting with me. She said that every time I talked about guns and shooting at work, I always talk with so much passion, and she could tell how much I love it. I was floored. I didn’t realize my idle chit-chat was so impactful.

            So we got down the range, I gave her a mini safety lesson. I set her up on a Ruger Mark III, which is a .22 pistol. It’s a great gun to start a brand new shooter on because it is so easy and fun to shoot. I started her out on an 8 inch round circle, and she had a great time with it. I could tell she was getting a little bored, so I’d prepared. I brought my Springfield subcompact XD 9mm. I warned her that that little gun has a pretty good kick. The first time she shot it, she jumped back about a foot! But after the initial shock, she got used to it and had a blast (pun intended, haha!). She was doing really well; she was shooting within a 3 inch circle. Then I brought out the zombie targets. These zombie targets are so much fun; they are splatter targets, so you can see where you’re hitting. So we had a great time killing our zombies! I told her she had to shoot him in the head, since that’s the only way to kill a zombie, and by golly she hit him in the head! When we were done, I took some pictures of her with her “kill” and sent her home with her target. She was so proud of herself; she said she was going to hang it up in her bedroom.

            She and I have been friends for several years, but now I have yet another shooting buddy, and I’m sure you can all agree with me on this: you can NEVER have enough shooting buddies!