You always wanted to know ...
How to Make Your Wife Hate Guns
By Kathy Jackson
An attractive young guy sidled up to me at the range the other day. He'd
been watching me shoot for awhile, looking at me out of the corners of
his eyes while I worked on my drawstroke. It had gotten harder and harder
to pretend I didn’t know he was watching me, so when he finally made up
his mind to come talk to me, I was almost relieved. Here it comes, I thought,
and braced myself.
"Excuse me," he began, twisting his hat in his hands awkwardly.
"I couldn't help but notice that you're a fine shooter." I smiled
my thanks, grateful he wasn’t one of those oh-so-helpful range gods who
would start our conversation by nitpicking my shooting. But I was still
braced for what was sure to come next, and watched to see what his approach
would be. "So, uh, do you come here often?" he asked.
"Not here, no," I admitted, "I've got another range where
I usually practice."
"But you do shoot regularly?" he pursued, almost pathetically
eager. "You like guns?" I admitted I did, and he finally got
up the courage to ask the question he'd come over to ask me.
"How do I get my wife to like guns, too?"
You know, if I knew the answer to that one, I could have my pick of any
guy at the range.They'd flock around me in eager anticipation that I might
let them in on the secret.
But the fact is, I don't know that. What I do know is how a guy might
go about making his woman hate guns. That secret, I can tell you
...
Never invite her to the range in the first place. You know she’ll
hate it, so why bother? Don’t risk being pleasantly surprised. Instead,
spend both days of every weekend at the local range or attending every
gun show or IDPA match in a four-state radius. Use every spare second
during the week for reloading, cleaning your guns, or just perusing firearms
magazines. If she ever comments wistfully that she sure wishes you would
spend some time with her, take that to mean she doesn’t want you to shoot
any more, and use the opportunity to start a good argument.
Spend all your household money on guns & shooting supplies.
Also, lie about it. Convince her you have neither honesty nor self-control
when it comes to buying guns and that you need her to put
the brakes on your purchases before you go bankrupt.
Disregard her legitimate safety concerns. At least once a week,
leave your loaded carry gun on the coffee table where the kids can get
it. Especially if your wife worries about safety, handle guns negligently
when she’s around. Dry fire while pointing the gun at her cat. Or at the
TV. You get bonus points if you accidentally shoot the TV while she is
in the room.
One poor clown I met once used to have a large picture
of his wife hanging over the mantelpiece, a beautiful portrait of herself
she’d given him for his birthday. His negligent discharge was the most
expensive one I ever heard of. It took a trip to Hawaii to repair the
damage.
Be a gun slob. After your trips to the range, clean your guns on
the dining room table. Put down a newspaper she hasn’t read yet, then
spill solvent so that it runs off the edge of the paper. Don’t wipe it
up – let her find it herself later, after it’s ruined the finish. And
when you’re done cleaning your guns, leave bits and pieces of used gun
cleaning supplies lying on the table for her to deal with.
Always bring every conversation around to guns, shooting, hunting, or politics.
Preferably all four. If she’s a liberal Democrat, be sure she knows that
there’s no way she can be a shooter without becoming a conservative Republican.
If she’s a vegetarian, brag about killing Bambi. This should guarantee
that she never wants to talk about it.
If that fails, and she does want to talk about it, be impatient
with her questions and dismissive of her concerns. Whatever you do, don’t
ask questions or try to understand why she feels the way she does, and
don’t provide patient explanations for technical details she doesn’t immediately
understand.
If she shows reluctance to learn to shoot, scare her into it. Talk
constantly about women who were raped, murdered, mutilated, tortured,
dismembered, violated, and just generally had Bad Stuff happen to them,
all because they didn’t carry a gun. This works well because most of your
tales will involve bad people using guns, and will thus reinforce her
suspicion that only bad people use guns.
If she is ever genuinely frightened by a home intruder or a mugger, you
don’t want her to talk herself into wanting a gun afterwards. So don’t
give her a chance to connect the dots on her own. If you jump in soon
enough to tell her how foolish she was to be without a gun, she will spend
all her energy arguing with you about whether she should have had one,
and argue herself out of wanting one.
Make range trips unpleasant. When she does agree to go to the range
with you, pick a filthy indoor range with unpleasant employees, or if
you must use an outdoor range, go when the weather is as ugly as it ever
gets in your area. Stay at the range for endless hours, and don’t offer
to do something afterwards that she thinks is fun. The longer you stay,
the more bonus points you get if the range has no bathroom or a dirty
bathroom. You get double bonus points if it’s got a really rank portapotty
with no toilet paper.
Make sure she’s intimidated by both the gun and the target you expect
her to hit. Start her out shooting a big-caliber gun at a tiny, distant
bullseye. Load the gun with extra-hot ammo, because it’s so doggone
funny to watch a new shooter embed the front sight in her eyebrow.
Whatever you do, don’t let her shoot a .22lr at an easily hit reactive
target on her first trip to the range. Make her really work to hit paper
on a target that is so far away she cannot tell whether she hit it anyway.
Get inappropriate equipment, and don’t let her choose her own.
When she is willing to get a gun of her own, don’t let her get a gun she
has picked out herself. If she wants a semi-auto, insist she starts with
a revolver. If she wants a revolver, make her start with a semi-auto.
If she wants a 1911, get her something smaller – like a titanium snubby
with rudimentary sights, or one of those tiny .380 semi-autos that weigh
next to nothing. When she complains about snappy recoil, let her feel
like a wimp and don’t let her find out that it’s often easier to shoot
a heavier gun.
Better yet, get her a cheap gun that you yourself wouldn’t be caught dead
trying to shoot. She can’t shoot well yet anyway, so what does it matter
that the gun you expect her to use is inaccurate, prone to misfires, and
has a nasty trigger?
Get her a holster that matches yours, and suggest she carry it on the
point of her hip like you do. Don’t believe her or take her
curves into consideration when she complains that your holster
carried your way is painful for her. If she complains, tell her she just
has to get used to it.
Don’t let her develop confidence in handling her gun. Most people
only enjoy doing things they’re good at, or could become good at. So load
the magazine for her. Load the gun for her. Rack the slide for her. If
the gun jams, clear it for her. Don’t let her try to do these things herself,
don’t show her how to do them, and, above all, make sure she knows that
you don’t think she is capable of learning how to do them. The best part
of this is that if she ever needs to use the gun for real, she won’t even
be able to get a round into the chamber by herself.
Don’t let her enroll in a class. Especially keep her away from
those risky women-only classes, where your gal just might find out about
guns that are particularly suited to her hands, may have a chance to try
on holsters designed to fit female body types, and might meet other women
who like to shoot. If she does accidentally get enrolled in such a class,
make sure you contradict everything the instructors taught her as soon
as she gets home.
“So there you have it,” I told my admirer. “How to make your wife hate
guns in ten easy lessons. I’m sure you’ve never done any of that … have
you?”