Be honest with yourself.
Wednesday, April 08, 2009 Filed in:
General gun
stuff, Techniques &
Training
In college I minored in music performance. Being just out of high
school (read: thoroughly stupid) I thought I was a hot musician,
harboring dreams of becoming a professional trumpet player. Like so
many other aspiring performers I really had no idea what the world
of a professional musician actually entailed, but I was absolutely
sure I had what it took.
One of my professors, an accomplished professional trombonist, made
it his job to bring us post-adolescents into the real world.
Shortly into my freshman term, he was talking with a few of the
members of the trumpet section after class. The talk turned to the
requirements of a "pro", and all of us were convinced we had the
Right Stuff. Our prof had heard this kind of chatter before, and
bet our first chair player that he didn't yet possess the bare
minimum skills necessary for the job.
Trumpet players are usually narcissistic personalities, the kind
who don't back down from a fight, and the kid said "you're
on!"
The prof sighed and said simply "get out your horn. I want you to
blow a perfect half-note G above the staff" (trumpet players in the
audience will understand.) The kid smirked, dropped his case to the
floor and pulled out his horn. "Wait a minute", said our teacher.
"I said a perfect G. No warmup. Just one perfect note; in tune from
start to end, solid attack, no slop or waviness, crisp decay. You
have one and only one shot. Go."
I shouldn't have to tell you the kid failed - miserably. Then
again, none of the rest of us would have done any better. We were
clueless: none of us yet knew enough to understand how much we
didn't yet know.
Fast forward a few decades, and the shooting range serves up the
same lesson. Georges Rahbani, "The Best Rifle
Instructor You've Never Heard Of" , has a way of impressing on
his students how they should assess their own abilities:
"You
are only as good as you are, on demand."
What you can do right now, without warm up or sighting shots,
without excuses or alibis, is the true measure of how good you
are.
This is different from how most people gauge their ability. Most
folks would take their rifle to the range on a nice sunny day,
settle in comfortably at the bench, fire a bunch of rounds, then
shoot a 1" group. They're so proud of that group they take the
target home and hang it in their garage or office. "I'm hot
stuff!", they'll think - after all, they have the target to prove
it!
The next day at the range it's raining, they've had a fight with
their spouse, can't get comfortable on the cold bench, and now
their best group doesn't even break 3". "That's not me", they'll
say to themselves, "I shoot one-inch groups!" The alibis flow like
PBR at a fraternity house, and serve to obscure the fact that the
3" group wasn't the anomaly - the 1" group was. The larger one is
the true indicator of their skill.
It's not what someone can do when everything is going their way
that shows ability; it's what they can do under suboptimal
conditions that does. If a person can't shoot until getting into
just the right stance, with perfect foot placement and textbook
body positioning, then that person still has a lot of work to do to
master the fundamentals. (I've seen people who can shoot pretty
well on a concrete pad, but go all to pieces on a gravel range.
They can't get into their comfort zone.)
This is one thing if we're talking about plinking, but becomes
another thing entirely when the subject turns to self defense. The
other guy isn't going to wait for us to get into the perfect stance
we learned from our guru; we need to be able to deliver rapid,
multiple, properly placed shots from whatever position the
situation dictates, under whatever conditions it hands us. That
requires the courage to admit to ourselves that maybe - just maybe
- we aren't quite as good as we think.
Right here, right now, no warmups, no excuses - how good are
you?
-=[
Grant ]=-
Tags: georges.rahbani