The Cornered Cat
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Gun control posts

Looking back over the Scratching Post blog, I see that I’ve had a few gun-politics posts over the past few weeks. For those who, like me, quickly get fed up with politics, let me explain a little bit about what I’m doing on this blog and why I’m doing it.

When I started writing Cornered Cat the website back in 2002, I stayed completely away from any mention whatsoever of gun politics. There are, after all, a million different places online where you can easily find politics of any flavor you like — but at the time, there were almost no websites about training and concealed carry written specifically for women.*

These days, I still don’t much enjoy writing about gun politics, and there are still lots of places where you can find information about what’s going on on the political front. I’m still excited about teaching women how to defend themselves and I’m still not interested in fawning over a bunch of dishonest old people wearing crocodile grins and business suits.

But.

After much soul-searching, I’ve come to this: Cornered Cat is about women learning how to defend themselves. Period, full stop.

Sometimes that means I must mention the political scene, because when a law is passed that makes it harder for women to defend themselves, that hurts all of us. This doesn’t just apply to “you can’t own this type of gun anymore” laws, either. It also applies to laws that affect your legal situation before or after you shoot, and to laws that tell you where you can or can’t carry. All of these laws have a very strong impact on your ability to protect yourself, and that means you need to know about them. (That’s one reason I’m a huge supporter of the work being done by the Armed Citizens Legal Defense Network, by the way. The legal education they provide is truly stunning, and so is the security of knowing they have your financial back after a shooting.)

Most of my readers are fairly new to concealed carry and self-defense. Not everyone new to the gun community realizes this, but our ability to exercise our basic human rights related to firearms has been expanding in recent years. That’s the good news. The bad news is that those rights were really, really hard-won, and they still hang by a thread in some areas. They aren’t a sure thing, and they can vanish overnight if we as gun owners don’t stick together to protect each other.

Even at the federal level, we are literally one bad court case or one bad law away from having no realistic access to modern tools for self-defense. This isn’t hyperbole; it is the plain and unadulterated truth. If no one tells our new people this, if no one educates them about what is happening and why it matters, people new to the firearms community will be blindsided by that bad law or bad court case. And in a lot of ways, that’s what the anti-gun side is doing right now: they are hoping that the huge wave of new shooters stays ignorant of what’s happening or why it matters until it’s too late to stop it.

So as much as I’d like to, I cannot simply ignore the precarious political situation right now. As Massad Ayoob pointed out on his own blog, “One of our regular blog commentators said recently that he wished I’d get off politics and back to talking about guns. I hear ya, Doc, but the thing of it is…there ain’t much more important ‘about guns’ than the right to acquire, own, and keep them.”

So that’s the scoop. Moving forward, in keeping with my basic mission, I intend for my blog posts to focus on education, not rants and not even calls to action. You can get that stuff anywhere! So I will always keep my main focus on teaching you how to carry and how to protect yourself with the guns you already own. But when appropriate, I will also help you understand how to protect the guns you own to protect yourself. Why? Because that, too, is part of being prepared to protect yourself.

 ***

* There were, of course, lots of sites with pictures of half-nekkid grrrls with their fingers on the trigger and muzzles pointed in stupidly inappropriate directions, but that’s a different thing. Also, although in the past few years there’s been a huge explosion of fun blogs that support women who shoot, there still are not many serious sites about firearms training for women, and almost none written by someone qualified to write them.

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The look

Everyone knows what a serious firearms instructor looks like: bald or shaven head, dark sunglasses, 5.11 pants, black or tan polo shirt. Pictures of these guys all look alike, with shadowy backgrounds and high-contrast mood lighting (yeah, so about those sunglasses, guys…). Almost a Men in Black look, only without the suit.

Well, I’m setting out to change that. I am a serious firearms instructor, but I can’t manage that look. Nor do I want to! For one thing, I have hair and really intend to keep it. For another, I specialize in realistic training for realistic people. It’s not about how badazz you look; it’s about being competent with a simple tool designed to help you save your life. It’s about being prepared to handle whatever life throws at you in a very practical way. It’s about keeping the life you already have, not about becoming someone else entirely.

So here’s the look I’m after: competent, realistic, practical, professional. If I can manage “feminine” while I’m at it, I’ll take that.

After the SHOT Show, my friend Oleg Volk took some of his friends and me out into the desert to shoot us. It’s okay, he’s a photographer. (And a darn fine shot, too.) I wasn’t wearing my teaching uniform, just a slightly casual “meeting other professionals” outfit I threw together for the range. Here’s the result:

I love Oleg’s work. But what do you think — did I meet my goal?

 

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Cornered Cat firearms training

Women & Guns Magazine just ran an excellent article about one of my classes. If you’re curious what happens in a Cornered Cat class for women, step over to their website and check it out.

 

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Visual

If you’re concerned about the basic human right to protect your own life, here’s an excellent infographic that makes it easy to explain to others how you feel. At the bottom, there’s a nifty tool where you can enter your zip code to find out who your politicians are and how to contact them.


American Gun Facts Infographic

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Awesome women

For me this year, SHOT Show was all about the people. Here are just a few of the awesome women I’ve touched bases with, and what they’re doing.

Lisa Looper created the Flashbang bra holster and boy howdy did it make a lot of buzz at the show! Lisa also had several funny and thought-provoking stories to tell, which I will be sharing with you in later posts. She’s very, very excited about the entire line of holster products for women, and I was (and am) especially impressed with her new line of pretty belts. Not only are these belts very pretty, they are also sturdy enough to hold the weight of a firearm comfortably all day long without sagging. Although they aren’t any thicker than a normal belt, they’re basically a four-layer sandwich: good leather, a kydex-type stiffener, another piece of leather, and a comfortable inner layer of  beautifully dyed suede. When Lisa talks about these belts, she gets all excited and you can just see how pleased she is to share them with you.

Claudia, Ann, Jane and the rest of the crew at Gun Tote’n Mamas are celebrating their five-year anniversary! Funny story behind GTM: Claudia never intended to get into concealed carry purses at all. She was a luggage accessory designer, doing very well in that field, when she brought her products to SHOT Show for the first time. When people saw the high-quality, inexpensive leather bags, she was “absolutely flooded” with women asking her to produce a holstered purse. She wasn’t quite sure how to go about doing that, but being a smart and savvy person, she immediately started talking to all the women firearms owners she could find about what they needed in a concealed carry bag. She paid special attention to qualified instructors and people who had been doing this a long time. The following year, she brought out the very practical Gun Tote’n Mamas line of purses, and her products have been steadily improving ever since.

Julianna and her gang at A Girl and A Gun Women’s Shooting League want everyone to know that they have a super-fun weekend planned for the AG&AG conference in March. (Yes, telling you about that is totally self-serving on my part, since I’m one of the featured instructors and am going to have an awesome time teaching some of the segments. But it seems unfair not to share it with you, since we’ll have even more fun if you can make it down to Texas for the party!) AG&AG has spread across a whole bunch of states in just a few years, with hundreds of women getting involved. I love, love, love to see groups like this coming together and helping women learn how to stay safe and have fun with their firearms! Julianna also wants everyone to know what an awesome job the AG&AG facilitators are doing with the local clubs. She’s very enthusiastic about the cool events planned at the local levels.

Natalie at Girl’s Guide to Guns tells me she’s working on making her site more fabulous than ever, with more connections to people, more cool gear, and more cool content.

Susan from the Women’s Shooting Alliance wants to hear from you. She’s putting together an online magazine for women who enjoy firearms (one print edition a year plus a whole bunch of electronic issues). What do you want to see in a magazine like that?

Speaking of magazines, Shelley Rae Sargent just launched GunUp the Magazine. She’s super-excited about this magazine, and believes it will reach the next generation of shooters. (It will!) You may remember her as the founding editor of the Western Shooting Journal; she’s stepped down as editor there but will continue to write a column for that magazine. Shelley and I had an excellent conversation at the women’s networking event after hours early in the week, and I have to say I’m impressed at how hard she’s worked to get where she is.

This entry is already too long, and I haven’t even told you half of it! I’ll try to post more tomorrow. It’s a little tricky because I’m still on the road, but worthwhile because you really should know about all the nifty people who are out there working to support women in the firearms world. If you follow the links above, there should be plenty of free ice cream to keep you busy during my travels.

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SHOT Show Day One

Every year, thousands of firearms enthusiasts and businesspeople descend on Las Vegas. Their mission: to show off the newest products and new designs while having a frantic, horrendously busy good time.

So, yeah. Busy. Lots of people, lots of products, lots of shiny things for yours truly to blink at.

Did I mention the people? One absolutely striking – I mean, almost shocking – thing this year is the surprising lack of Booth Babes. To be absolutely honest, I have so far seen one woman wearing shorts and a push-up tank top working a law enforcement booth; three or four hanging around one other booth; and one scantily-clad busty woman putting her autograph on an advertising poster. That’s it. And that’s weird, because in years past the BBs were everywhere. There were fewer last year than I’d seen before, but this year they really aren’t here at all.

Lest you think I’m hung up on the sex thing, I’m really not. People can do whatever they want to do for a living. All the same, I’m thrilled to see fewer BBs because it means the industry has finally started to realize that they aren’t just selling their products to men, and that women are an important part of their customer base. Once a company realizes that their market includes women, it usually adjusts its advertising to reflect that truth. That means the vanishing BB is huge and important news, not just a minor side note.

Okay, what follows is a near-verbatim transcript from my audio notes today. Ready? Here goes…

We decided to start in the law enforcement corner, the part that’s h idden in the far back corners of the basement.

First impressions: SHOT Show always has good security, but I do have the impression that security is a lot heavier than normal. Every single door to the law enforcement areas has a guard, and there are big signs everywhere urging people to report suspicious activity. Not surprising in view of recent political events, I guess.

Two tee shirts walking past. First: “I support the right to arm bears.” Personally, I don’t think most bears need an AR, do you? Second: “I carry a gun because a cop is too heavy.” The guy wearing that one had an indefinable air about him (maybe it was the high & tight, the 5.11 pants, and the sunglasses indoors) that said he was a cop. Hm.

Note to self: Elite First Aid has emergency kits. I need to update mine. Always something, isn’t it?

Olight’s tiny bright light — a one cell CR123.

Olight’s next size up, a two-cell tiny bright.

At the Olight booth, I found two flashlight models that were of interest. I asked the sales guy, “Please show me your smallest bright flashlight, or your brightest small flashlight.” He showed me two lights. First, the S10: a single cell CR123 light barely larger than its battery. The second was a double cell T20 digital, slightly larger but still small enough and slender enough to carry every day. Both of them were super bright and easy to carry.

I just took a picture of an articulated mannequin wearing a target shirt at the Law Enforcement Targets booth. LE Targets is where I buy most of my targets, and they do have some nifty things. Of course, they have prominently featured their line of zombie targets, which is kinda cool. I’m a big fan of the more realistic targets though, especially the ones that let you visualize the hit zones at different angles.

Articulated, moveable mannequin target from LE Targets.

Saw a holster booth that appeared to be filled with knock-offs of the knock-offs. Fascinating.

RAC secure storage device.

Nifty product: the RAC, an unusual gun storage device. It comes in two sizes: a short version, which will hold a single firearm, and a tall version that holds up to three guns. On the tall version, you can store multiple handguns, multiple long guns, or a mixture of the two. The device bolts firmly to a floor, a wall, or any solid surface, and  opens with a key. It does not hide the gun from view, but it does very securely prevent tampering or theft and it does allow relatively quick access. The thing I really liked about this product is that you can mount multiple handguns or multiple rifles, making it a good way to store your home defense guns if you have a spouse who would also use one.

RAC storage device, empty.

This is interesting: apparently, they are allowing direct retail sales at the show this year. That’s a change from years past. I wonder what it means.

One of the law enforcement companies is making ballistic vests that are concealable and that are  actually shaped to deal with a female chest shape. No more squished boobies for those who wear these things.

At the Genesis flashlight booth, I looked at the E84. This little LED flashlight throws a reported 280 lumens from a single cell CR123 battery. It uses a tailcap switch but also has a front dial so you can select a low, medium, or high intensity beam before you touch the switch, and there’s also a strobe option. I’m a fan of this kind of setup for an everyday light. You leave it set on high intensity all the time so it’s ready for defensive use, but then you can save the battery by dialing it down before activating it if you’re using it for some other task. It’s going to retail around $65.

Five years ago, a flashlight like that would have cost twice that much money, been half as bright and in a two cell sized package. Ten years ago, you couldn’t buy one at all. I love advancing technology!

In case  you’re wondering why I’m fixated on flashlights this year, it’s simple: they are useful for self-defense and for a dozen other purposes. People who carry a firearm really should also have a light so they can identify their target, and because they make nifty defense tools in a million situations where a firearm isn’t the appropriate choice. As far as I can tell, there’s no longer any reason not to have one in your pocket or purse all the time. They’ve shrunk to almost nothing in size and the costs for a really good one have come down dramatically. Once you start carrying a light, you’ll wonder how you ever lived without it. So I’m making a quick spot-check survey of what’s out there in the tiniest, most easily carried sizes.

HT Holsters offers a Speed Draw concealed carry holster, a fiberglass reinforced polymer holster designed to be worn outside the waistband. It’s a bit bulky for concealed carry, but it’s also amazingly sturdy and rock-solid. The thing that caught my eye: an innovative retention system that holds the gun very securely in the holster to defeat gun grabs. It consists of a flat rocking lever that moves very naturally out of the way when you draw the gun with a proper grip, but which defeats any attempt to remove the gun from any other angle. I picked one up for testing and review, so you can expect to see something about it down the road.

Eagle Tac tiny brights.

EagleTac offers a tiny little flashlight – again, a single cell CR123 with an LED – that throws around 175 lumen. The plain black one will retail around $40, or you can get a prettier (and easier to find in the dark!) one in titanium for around $70.

I always like stopping by the LaserLyte booth, because they have fun products as well as useful ones. This year they’re offering something called the Center Mass, a laser with multiple dots that make it easier to find your laser at a distance. Interesting idea. The other nifty thing at that booth (and I think they’ve been offering these for awhile now) is a cute little laser training target that stays lit when you hit it. They’re small and come two to a package, making them good for multiple target drills as well as for single target drills. As we all know, dry fire can sometimes feel a little boring because there’s no direct feedback, so a product like this can help you stay focused longer while you practice good trigger control. That’s a good thing. Those reactive laser targets will probably retail at $150 for two.

Stopped and shook hands with the Pistol Wear people. They still offer some of the most comfortable belly bands in the industry – I love these things! – and they work really well for active people during exercise. The neoprene based soft holsters hold the gun securely and comfortably, and the product design allows you to adjust the fit without any leftover itchy bits sticking out.

Designer Concealed Carry genuine crocodile bag.

Oh my goodness! The Woolstenhulme Designer Concealed Carry purses this year look beautiful! Last year, when I talked to owner Kate Woolstenhulme, she was having a terrible time with suppliers. But she’s worked out those problems and has kicked her production into high gear with suppliers who can provide much better service than she found in the past. Better than that, I absolutely love the look of this year’s offerings. These purses have come a million miles from their origins. The looks have improved a little, but the function has improved tremendously. All of her new purses offer true ambidextrous function with locking zippers, adjustable strap lengths, and excellent general purpose features on the inside. Most offer additional elastic loops to hold your pepper spray or spare magazines. The gun compartments are well-integrated into the purse styles, so they provide a really discreet carry method. And the new high-end genuine crocodile purse? Amazing! (Far too rich for my budget, mind you … but I’m a big believer that everyone has a right to protect themselves using efficient modern tools. For those with a lifestyle that includes a serious commitment to high fashion, these bags make it possible to do that.) New this year, too, are some excellent men’s bags with the same well-designed internal structure. I took a few pictures of the DCC bags, but all of them were blurry and didn’t do these gorgeous bags much justice. If I can find the time, maybe I’ll stop back by there again with a real camera.

While I was in the DCC booth, Gun Rights Radio mogul Mark Vanderberg walked in. On my audio, there’s a record of Mark saying, “I bought two purses this year and I’m looking for another one…” To be honest, the rest of the story was that the purchases were Christmas presents for his wife, but you know.

All right, use your imagination. Just pretend that you are the director of marketing for a company that sells pinkoflage and camoflage nightwear for women. How would you dress your female sales staff at SHOT Show?

Bulldog Cases offers secure, fast access small safes. On the show floor, the marketing person showed me products that ranged in price from $25 to $300. Most are electronic and some biometric. I’ll be doing a full review at some point in the future.

Oh crap! I just found out that EVERY image I took at this booth and after this point didn’t survive. That would include all of the pictures of the awesome women I met at the women’s networking event after hours. Crum, crum, crum. Ahh well. We’ll move forward with what we have.

Dang.

Totally outside my usual sphere, I kinda love the idea of a neoprene gun cover for a waterfowl shotgun. They look good and I’m sure they feel better in your hands than a soggy wet freezing cold gun.

Lots of pink accessories everywhere. Pink rifle slings, pink gun cases, pink range bags. Retailers have noticed that women are part of the market. Now if we can only get them to realize that 1) not every woman loves pink, and 2) most of us would prefer a range of color options including traditional black, and 3) color has very little to do with it, we’d be making some progress!

By the way, the Outdoor Connection has a fairly decent looking pink range bag with lots of pockets. It looks like it has good functionality at a glance, but I was pressed for time and didn’t take time for a full exam.

Here’s a startup company: Everyday Tactical Gear. Tagline offers “tactical solutions for men and women,” and the products are purses and bags. I picked up a very pretty evening bag in a plastic faux croc  with a detachable chain strap (so it can be used as either a clutch or a purse). Look for a longer review later, but so far I’m impressed: ambidextrous, adequate size, attractive, normal-looking. Prices look to range from around $50 to around $180, with most falling in the $70 range. The designer, Kim, tells me, “I wanted bags that everyone could afford to buy, that would go with every outfit, that you could buy multiple purses, that men could wear if they wanted to, that were very useful, cute, fashionable, and safe and practical.” Internally, ETG purses offer a neoprene gun pouch that Kim refers to as a “trigger guard.” She believes all you have to have – within a dedicated gun compartment – is something to reassure people that the trigger is covered so nothing gets stuck in it. The one-size-fits-most sleeve fills that function and holds the gun at the user’s preferred depth and angle inside the purse.

Just bumped into Jessica and her crew from Guns and Lace. She’s good people.

Speaking of things that seem like a spectacularly bad idea, I just walked past a pocket knife with a handle shaped like a little pistol. What in the world are they thinking??

Lots of reactive targets and falling steel.

More pink rifle slings than you could shake a long gun at.

NextTorch offers some cool little lights, including one that allows you to program the functionality of the flashlight from your computer. Wait, what? Well, it’s a superbright LED. So you can set it up to always give you full bright with a single click of the tailcap switch. Or you can set it up to cycle through dim, medium, bright, strobe. Or whatever floats your boat. And program the strobe for a specific speed. Oh, and it also recharges via USB while it’s plugged into your computer, so there’s that. Retail prices for these range start around $100.

Lots of companies sell accessories that help you store more guns in your gun safe, or keep your gun safe organized. That’s a good thing.

Note to self: you need to write an article about traveling with firearms and another one specifically about flying with firearms.

Blade Tech offers a superbright pink line – looks to be branded by Packing in Pink – including the dropped and offset holster that makes such good range gear for women with curves. Of course Blade Tech makes one of my all time favorite products, the very inexpensive and practical Training Barrel for dry fire and movement drills.

There’s a company that makes a very clever cowboy-action style holster for your water bottle. I took a picture, but did I mention all my images vanished? And of course, I made a point of having the company name in the image and somehow it didn’t make it into the audio. More dirty words.

Speaking of stupid ideas, I cannot imagine why anyone serious about protecting themselves would ever wear a tee shirt whose sole purpose is to inform others what a jerk you are.

Oh, these poor people! Here’s an AR company that produces California-legal rifles and adaptations. It’s based out of Placerville, CA and looks to be someone’s small family business. The unfortunate thing? The name is Newtown Firearms Company. Sigh.

Kestrel makes a bullhorn that’s supposed to be waterproof and durable. I’m thinking about it, because one of my biggest challenges as an instructor is making sure students hear my range commands clearly. I can bellow with the best of ‘em, but it might be nice to leave the range without a sore throat for a change.

Titan Gun Safes offers a fast access mechanical (not electronic) safe. When you open the door, the holstered gun slides out slightly so you can grab it very quickly and efficiently. I really like this design. Again, maybe a full review down the road. There’s a video on their website so you can see how it works.

Gun company to watch: Canik. Looks like they’re poised to take the budget-gun slot that Taurus might be vacating as they put more emphasis on quality control.

It sure looks to me like Lisa Looper at the Flashbang Holster Company is having a good show. When I stopped by the Flashbang booth, it was surrounded by a huge crowd – literally three or four people deep in the aisle – all craning their necks to see the product better. The funny part? The crowd was all male. Not a woman in sight! Just so you know, I keep hearing from other women how much they love the Flashbang. It’s easy to see why. The original Flashbang provides an excellent, reliable way to hold the gun securely while allowing a very fast draw without relying on wearing a belt. Speaking of belts, Looper does offer belt based holsters too, and recently released some very attractive and functional belt styles for women. I will say it’s about time someone addressed that part of the market.

Wow, I’m loving the new purse and bag designs from Gun Tote’n Mamas. The designer, Claudia, tells me they’ve had great success with these and it’s easy to see why. All their styles are fully ambidextrous and they have a selection of different sizes to fit different sizes of guns. The new “Legacy” series – they plan to release one every year – donates $5 per purchase toward the Turning Point Foundation, a charity for battered women. The one they released this year, Model 30, is a lush and beautiful brown suede with leather faux-croc trim. Mostly made of solid leather with good linings, GTM purses provide  a Velcro lined gun compartment with a bucket type holster inside. Almost all styles retail for less than $100.

Still looking for practical ways to secure firearms when not in use, I’m standing in the SportLock booth. Lots here to study, but I zero in on the Life Jacket series to secure handguns, shotguns, and AR-style rifles. These nifty products are super-lightweight (under 2 pounds for the steel versions and almost nothing for the polycarbon one) and can easily travel with the gun wherever it goes – although they also allow you to mount them to a solid surface if you’d prefer. They secure with a key and cover the trigger, trigger guard, and the moving parts of the action. According to the designer and the written regulations, they are TSA-compliant.

Hot Shot Tactical offers a single cell AA flashlight. Superbright with a bubble lens and a focus feature that lets you choose the throw and dispersion of your very smooth beam. Retail around $50. Nice: you can choose bright pink, desert tan, OD green, or black. I’ve always thought it was insane to sell black flashlights, since you can never find a black flashlight in the dark. That bright pink one would be easy to find in the bottom of a purse.

Let me say it again. There’s no longer any reason at all not to carry an adequate flashlight with you everywhere you go, every day.

It’s probably been about 3,682 times today that I felt the desire to holler out the word, “MUZZLE!” Yes, I know all the firing pins are removed (and checked, double checked, and triple checked) before the guns are allowed on the show floor. I know that in theory there’s no live ammunition anywhere in the building. I don’t care. I think people who handle guns all the time should be more cautious and more careful than the average. But by and large, they are not.  Bad gun handling habits are pernicious and contagious. I HATE watching people become so complacent with these gun-shaped objects, so cluelessly unaware of what they’re doing and so casual about how they’re doing it. People have this idea that people who handle guns for a living must be especially safe and reliable gun handlers. It’s not true. Many of the sales beings who inhabit the show floor have spent so much time ignoring the safety rules that it would take them a serious act of the will to deliberately follow them. That’s the complete opposite of how your safety habits should be.

Did I mention I don’t like having guns pointed at me?

V-Line Cases offer mechanical, no batteries ways to secure guns in storage containers of various sizes. Worth a deeper look … later.

Destinee has a new website. It’s called The Arms Guide. She says, “It’s very gun-centric, but it’s concealed carry, self defense, guns, holsters… for people! There’s going to be a lot of it that’s geared towards women, but it’ll be holistic and good for everyone.”

At the women’s networking event after hours, I met up with a bajillion fabulous and brilliant women. More on that later!

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Day Zero of SHOT Show: Media Day at the Range

Despite freezing temperatures and an icy wind that had to be felt to be believed, the crowd was bigger than ever at the Media Day pre-SHOT Show event on the range outside Las Vegas. That’s not surprising, as this first opportunity to actually shoot the new products that will be displayed at the show creates a lot of buzz. True to my mission, I stuck with handguns only, and only those appropriate for concealed carry.  Here are three that caught my eye.

Bundled up for cold weather, shooting the Walther PPQ M2 — which has a sweet trigger with a short reset.

At the Walther booth, I had my hands on the 9mm PPQ M2. This is an updated version of the popular PPQ, with the interchangeable backstrap. The primary change is that they’ve turned the magazine release into a traditional button in the traditional spot on the grip. It’s ambidextrous – or at least, it can be reversed for either left hand or right hand operation. You might remember that previous iterations of the PPQ, like Walther’s other offerings, put the mag release as a fold-down lever on the trigger guard. Putting the release as a push button in the usual spot makes it much easier to switch from one firearm to another without losing your training advantage.

The thing I liked best about the PPQ was the trigger. It was crisp, with a short reset and just enough weight for positive feedback while shooting. The gun also seemed to recoil less than I would have expected from the light frame, but I’d really like to take it through its paces with various ammunition types before I go on record for that one.

Kahr’s new CW380, a budget version of their popular .380 carry pistol.

Glock has an updated .45 caliber carry gun. It’s the 30S – and the ‘S’ stands for ‘slim… sorta.’ It’s a Glock 30 body with the slimmer Glock 36 slide on top, making it a little thinner for concealed carry without sacrificing capacity. People have been building these as frankenguns since forever, so it’s nice to see that there’s an official version now from the factory.

Kahr offers a new CW380, a .380 ACP counterpart to the popular CW9 in Kahr’s budget line (or, put another way, a budget-minded counterpart to Kahr’s popular .380 pocket pistol). Like all Kahrs, this one offers a long but relatively light and smooth trigger pull. Unlike most guns in that caliber and class, the CW9 feels solid and quality in the hand. It shot accurately, too.

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Learning from others

As an instructor, I sometimes deal with awkward moments during a class. One of the most cringe-inducing moments happens when a student raises her hand and says something like, “I had an incident. This is what happened ( ____ ). Did I do the right thing?”

It can be even more awkward when she asks, “What should I have done?”

On one hand, I love these moments because they are so powerful. It’s real, it’s personal, it happened to someone we know who’s sitting right here. We can ask her about it and see it through her eyes. How much more powerful can a teaching moment get?

On the other hand, questions like this create an emotional and—in some senses—even ethical dilemma for me as I stand at the front of a class full of students.

The emotional dilemma should be obvious. We are talking to, with, and about a survivor. She went through a terrible experience and she trusted us with the story. She almost certainly needs affirmation, and the worse her experience was, the more strongly she’s likely to need that affirmation. How could we, how dare we, say anything even slightly critical of the things she did? She was there, we weren’t. She faced the dragon, we didn’t. Whatever she did to survive, she survived. Good for her. If she made any mistakes, she doesn’t want to hear about them. No matter how bad any those mistakes may have been in some objective sense—she survived. So there’s a great big emotional bear trap right there, just waiting for us to fall into it.

The ethical dilemma flows almost directly out of the emotional one. Some choices are, in actual fact, better than others. Sometimes someone lives through an event because of sheer good luck, not by doing the things that give her the best chance of surviving. Her situation is already past, and she may need reassurance to put her nightmares to rest—but you have other students. And you have a responsibility to those students. There may be someone sitting the class who really, really needs to hear how to make the right choice.

It would be awful if one woman’s story led another woman to make dangerous choices that lead her into a bad situation, or that make a bad situation even worse. Luck happens, but we should never count on it.

It’s an unusual instructor who hasn’t faced a moment like that with her students.

Every situation is different and the dynamics of every class are different, so I can’t give you any one size fits all solutions to these dilemmas. But I can tell you the one important thing I’ve learned: in moments like these, it’s more important to listen than it is to talk. Most of the time, the student already knows what she needs to hear, even if she doesn’t consciously realize it. If you listen hard enough, you will hear her say it or not-quite say it. Then you can repeat the important lesson back to her. She will think you are brilliant, and will think you have taught her something new. But you will know the truth: that she taught both you and herself the thing she and the other students needed to learn from her situation.

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