How to shoot so you can’t miss…

 

Welcome to today’s newsletter, sponsored by Dry Fire Training Cards and the 21 day Alpha Shooter DVD course…guaranteed to help you shoot 2x faster and 2x more accurately in the next 21 days or your money back.  Click >HERE< to learn more.

Many police departments have a standard for their officers of needing do be able to draw and put 2 rounds on target in 1.5 seconds.  As a result, many concealed carry and defensive pistol classes have also set that same standard.

This is a good, solid standard that all shooters should aim for.  Not just law enforcement, but everyone who owns a pistol for self-defense purposes.

But once you get to where you can draw and put 2 rounds on target in 1.5 seconds, does that mean that it’s time to move on to the next skill, drill, or exercise?

Let me ask the same question in a very different way…

If a young basketball player came to you and said that they had just made a free throw for the first time, would you expect them to be able to be able to make free throws in a game?  In a championship game?

Would you expect them to be able to make free throws in the last second of a tie game?

Of course not.

Nobody thinks that achieving the standard (making a free throw in practice) for the first time, 10th time, or even the 50th time translates into not needing to practice the basics more.

If you were giving that young basketball player advice, you’d tell them to practice free throws as often as possible.  If that kid played ball in college, you’d expect them to keep practicing free throws, several times per week.  If that kid made it to the pros, you’d still expect them to keep practicing.

You’d expect them to practice until it was virtually impossible for them to miss anymore.  You’d expect them to practice beyond the point where you expect them to make the shot, but to the point where you’re shocked if they missed.

But basketball is just a game.  There’s no chance that lives may be at stake if you don’t get things right.

The stakes are AT LEAST as high with shooting as with basketball and we should approach shooting practice the same way that we approach practicing for sports.

Once you’ve got the basics figured out, it’s tempting to want to move on to high-speed-tactical-ninja-operator skills…

But you know what?

There really aren’t any high-speed-tactical-ninja-operator techniques—Just the application of basic skills faster, on the move, around obstacles, and under more and more stress.

If you’ve gone through any of our higher speed training from special operations instructors, you probably recognize this.

First you get your accuracy down with the application of solid basic skills–the fundamentals.

Then you add complexity like drawing from a holster and eventually drawing from a concealed holster.

You keep focusing on the basics while gradually adding stress in the form of a timer, movement, competition, awkward positions, standards, increased speed, increased accuracy, increased distance, fighting to your gun, malfunctions, etc.

Pretty soon, you’re doing something that many would call “high speed” but it still just boils down to executing basic skills.

So, how much should you focus on the basics?

Ask an NFL coach how much they want their players focusing on blocking and tackling, and they’ll tell you they want their guys practicing every day.

Ask a pro tennis coach how much they want their players practicing serves, they’ll give you the same answer.

In short, don’t stop practicing the basics when you can hit the target…practice until you can’t miss.

When I was boxing and doing MMA, I had to throw the basic 6 punches perfectly, 100x apiece, every day.  I couldn’t stop on day 2 or day 20 when I looked impressive hitting a bag.  I had to keep practicing until I could throw them perfectly when I was on the move, against a moving opponent, when I was tired, gassed, punch-drunk, or off balance.

In some circles, practicing until you can’t miss is called unconscious competence.  Others call it mastery.  It’s when you do something successfully so many times that you don’t have to think about it to do it successfully again.

It’s when you can still perform on autopilot.

It’s when you can still perform under extreme stress.

It’s the level of performance that you want to get to if you own a gun for self-defense…and it’s easier than you think.

Using old school training methods like live fire at a range, it takes too much time and too much money.

Using old school dry fire training like what you find on YouTube, online articles, and newsstand magazines, it’s kind of boring and it’s likely that you’ll develop separate muscle memory for dry fire at home and live fire with real bullets.

But using new-school dry fire training, like what students do with 21 Day Alpha Shooter, it’s less expensive than a single trip to the range, WAY more effective, and it’s actually fun to practice…even if it only works out to an hour or so a week.

Look at it this way…if you do dry fire drills for 9 minutes per day (all at once or 3×3 minute blocks) every day for a month, you’ll get in 1000-3000 reps.  This could be in addition to any live fire practice that you choose to do.

Nine minutes per day isn’t very much time to spend on something that’s fun that you’re passionate about and could save your life.  If you can only practice half of the time, that’s STILL 500-1500 reps per month.  And once you reach the skill level you want, you can back off to practicing 2-3 times a week.

Doing that many repetitions of anything with good form will help you be better at it, but one of the huge advantages of dry fire is that frequent small blocks of practice over time beats the traditional model of doing a bunch of reps in a single session.

Here’s an example of what it looks like when you spend just a few minutes per day doing dry fire and almost no time doing live fire…even when all sorts of problems pop up.

When you break it down, it’s just execution of the fundamentals with a few curve balls thrown in.  Sight picture, trigger press.  Sight picture, trigger press.  A little movement, a little speed, and a few complications.

Even though I did regular dry fire with my carbine, I probably shot less than 50 rounds of live fire with my carbine in the 6 months leading up to this video.

I’ve shot my pistol more, but the big thing is that I do just a few minutes of dry fire practice every single day.

There were a few hiccups that I ran into during this course of fire that you probably saw 🙂

If you watch it closely, you might see a few of them…My carbine magazine was loaded with a random (inadequate) number of rounds, guaranteeing that I’d run empty.

I forgot to safe my carbine when I slung it (I didn’t know whether I went dry or had a malfunction) and had to shift my visual focus and left hand to engaging the safety while clearing cover and drawing one handed with my right hand.  It turned a 2-3 second transition into a 4-5 second one.  In a gunfight, I probably wouldn’t safe the carbine when it ran dry, but this wasn’t a gunfight, I hadn’t visually + physically verified that the mag+chamber were empty and safing the carbine was what we were doing.

Then, my shirt got caught in the draw and I had to push the gun out to the side to clear it.  That happens.  You either learn to deal with it in practice, or it bites you when lives are on the line.

I was running my Glock 26 with 10 rounds and when it went dry, my thumb was riding the slide stop and kept the slide from locking back.  This is a common problem for people who have spent a lot of time shooting 1911s.

When I grabbed the 2nd mag, I grabbed a handfull of shirt and had to take care of that before bringing the mag up.

So, why am I showing you a video with a lot of problems?

Here’s the thing…as you add speed and complexity to your shooting, Murphy shows up and weird things happen.  It’s a lot easier to instantly react to them without a lot of thought when you’ve got the fundamentals dialed in to where you can do them on autopilot.

So train hard, train often, and make it a habit of working through problems when they come up.

And in the meantime, the best and most affordable way to master the fundamentals shown in this video are with at home dry fire drills from Dry Fire Training Cards.  Get yours now, along with the companion guide and 21 day Alpha Shooter guide that walks you, step by step, through your first 21 days of training and is guaranteed to help you shoot 300% better or your money back.  Click >HERE< to learn more now.

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11 Comments

  • Larry Douglas

    Reply Reply May 23, 2018

    Hi, Ox. I can’t access the video either. I’m running Firefox and Windows 10 on an HP workstation. Nothing shows up in the designated space for the video. Undoubtedly something in my software setup but just FYI.

    • Ox

      Reply Reply May 23, 2018

      I’ve added the youtube version. I’m not sure why it was working for most, but not some. Thanks for letting me know what you were running.

  • M. Hatch

    Reply Reply May 23, 2018

    I was able to view it just fine Ox…no problems. I wouldn’t have a FB account if it was the ONLY media available. People… complain about everything. Great job again Ox…

  • Don Brown

    Reply Reply May 22, 2018

    Video is fine.
    Thanks for sharing the human side of Ox.
    I was beginning to wonder if you were an android with all the 10 round single hole videos, 100 yd subcompact hits, and such.
    I’m not sure if I would safe the carbine either; train like you fight. In a fight, ROT is all that counts.
    Keep sharing, it’s appreciated!

    • Ox

      Reply Reply May 22, 2018

      Hey Don…safing the carbine may very well be considered a training scar. In 3-gun, if you sling or put set down your carbine without the chamber being locked to the rear or being on safe, you can get DQ’d. When it went click instead of bang, I didn’t know if it was because of an empty chamber or a malfunction. So, when I realized I hadn’t safed it, before I let it hang, I stuttered and safed it.

  • Wolffie

    Reply Reply May 22, 2018

    Facebook will not let me see the video. I see no resolution from this problem since 2017. I am not on FB. I refuse to use FB. I am told when I go to the link I must sign in or join.
    I would like to know how I may view the video. Thanks.

    • Ox

      Reply Reply May 22, 2018

      I apologize, but I’m not sure why you’re having that problem…I tested it last year, yesterday and again just now in multiple browsers to make sure that it would work if you weren’t logged into facebook or didn’t have a facebook account.

      are you on a phone or desktop?

      what browser are you using?

  • R. S. Elam

    Reply Reply May 8, 2017

    I can’t either. FB is outta the question.

    • Ox

      Reply Reply May 8, 2017

      Hi R. S. I’m sorry, but what can’t you do? You can’t join FB, you can’t see the video, or something else? The reason I ask is that you don’t need to be logged into FB OR have a FB account to view the video. I’m happy to help, but I need a little more info 🙂

  • Ben

    Reply Reply May 5, 2017

    Not everybody has Facebook, because we’re smart. Post videos to YouTube?

    • Ox

      Reply Reply May 6, 2017

      Ben, you should be able to see the video, even if you don’t have a facebook account…are you saying you can’t?

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