The Cornered Cat
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Feeling good

Awhile back, a friend told me that she’d be getting away from firearms training and that she would no longer be attending her martial arts school. “I just feel like it’s time to nurture the feminine side of myself,” she said, “and guns just don’t play into that.” For her, self-defense felt like a masculine concern, and she was tired of being treated like one of the guys all the time.

Although that’s not the way I roll, I understood what my friend meant. There have certainly been days I walked off the range hot, tired and sweaty, wearing grimy clothes, covered with range dust and feeling anything but feminine. Ugh.

And yet… There have been far more days when I’ve walked off the range hot, tired and sweaty, wearing grimy clothes, covered with range dust and wearing a great big smile because I’d had a blast and did what I set out to do.

There have been many days when I’ve worked with students who struggled all morning, who sagged through the afternoon, and who couldn’t thank me enough at the end of the day—because they felt good, almost euphoric, when they realized what they had learned and when they looked at how far they’d come in a single day of hard work. It’s an amazing feeling, and it lasts for a lifetime.

Isn’t that wonderful feeling worth a little discomfort, a little sweat, a little effort? I think it is!

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Eye can see clearly now

When I was in second grade, my parents took me to the eye doctor. After I squinted at the chart and made a bunch of bad guesses about what it said, the doctor scrawled out a prescription for glasses. “I’m surprised she didn’t notice sooner,” the doctor told my parents. “She’s very nearsighted.”

Thus began my love-hate relationship with glasses. I love living in a place and  time where it’s possible to correct your vision. Can you imagine living in the days before eyeglasses were invented? That would be awful! So no matter how much of a hassle I find my glasses, I’m certainly thankful to have them.

When I first began shooting, I soon discovered that safety eyewear and prescription glasses don’t go together all that well. You can’t go without safety gear, because you need side shields and some protection from the top to prevent brass from getting behind your eyeglasses. You also need lenses made of solid polycarb, so they won’t shatter if something bounces back at you. Most regular eyeglasses just won’t cut it by themselves.

No problem, I figured, I’ll just grab some $5 cheapie safety goggles from the hardware store, the kind with an elastic strap that will just go right over the top of my glasses.

Uh-uh. No. Goggles and glasses aren’t made to wear together no matter what the package says. The glasses fog. Smear ‘em with no-fog goop, and they still fog. The goggles – did I mention cheap? – distort the images. The cheap plastic scratches on first use. You get glare. It’s uncomfortable. Not worth it. I’d pay $5 to avoid this hassle.

Fine, I thought. I’ll move up to a $20 pair of over-the-glasses protective eyeglasses, like you can find at the gun store.

Better, but still not ideal. For one thing, wearing two pairs of glasses means the seal on your ear muffs gets twice as disrupted. So now you’re fighting with your ear protection as well as your eyewear. You still get a lot of glare and distortion. I found that sometimes the outer pair of glasses would slide down my nose, which made it decidedly hard to shoot well. At least this method reduced the amount of fogging. Sort of. It was still a long way from ideal.

A friend suggested just wearing protective eyewear without my usual glasses underneath. Yeah, like I hadn’t already thought of that. My vision is too bad without glasses to go this route, so I thanked her and moved on.

So what’s a girl with bad eyes to do? For me, the answer was simple. With as much time as I spend on the range, I simply had to pony up the money for prescription safety glasses. Oh, I can hear you cringing from here. But it’s nowhere near as expensive as you’d think, and for me it was a godsend. Totally, 100% worth it, no questions asked. If you shoot a lot, you should look into this possibility the next time you get your prescription updated. Did I mention worth it?

Meanwhile, back in the real world where people are sometimes broke and where most people don’t spend as much time on the range as I do, here’s one answer.

  • First, ask your optician to put polycarb lenses in your regular eyeglasses. It’s an upgrade, but it’s typically only around $15 as an add on when you’re buying your glasses. You might do this anyway, as polycarbs tend to be lightweight and a bit more sturdy over time. And that whole “won’t shatter when struck” thing is kind of important too.
  • Next, pop over to Amazon and order simple $5 side shields (like these) for your glasses. The side shields keep brass from flying in from the sides when you’re shooting. As you can see, they do work best with non-fancy earpieces, so that’s something to keep in mind.
  • Finally, always wear a ball cap on the range to keep brass from falling in behind your glasses from the top.

Problem solved!

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How did this happen?

Life is worth defending.At the beginning of a new year, it’s always helpful to take a quick look around. Where have you been? Where are you going? Do you like the direction your life is headed, right now? If so, what can you do to make it even better? If not, what can you change to bring the focus back to where you want it?

For me, right now that process involves looking at Cornered Cat. First, a little history. For those who don’t know, Cornered Cat is an idea that “just grew” from things that were happening in my life more than a dozen years ago.

When I started shooting, back in late 1999 or early 2000, there really wasn’t a lot of support for women gun owners online – at least, not for women specifically interested in concealed carry and self defense. Oh, there were plenty of sites about women with guns. But those sites weren’t exactly for women, if you know what I mean. In addition to these soft porn sites, there were hundreds if not thousands of sites about gun politics, and there were hundreds of uber-tactical sites for the Walter Mitty types and the fantasy warriors. You know the type I mean: black background, white text, red highlights with blood splatters splashed artistically in the background, full of angry screeds about killing them all and letting God sort them out. When I looked for simple, realistic information designed for realistic people, there wasn’t much I could find. And I could count the number of useful sites with information intended for women on one hand.

Partly because of this lack, I started building my own little reference library. I’ve kept a quotes file since I was a little girl. The earliest iteration was, quite literally, scrawled in crayon in a school notebook, but I later got smart and moved it onto the computer where it has lived ever since. So when I started shooting, I read a lot and, true to my life-long habit, I took a lot of notes that ended up in my quotes file. Because I was very serious about learning to protect myself in the most efficient and practical ways, I studied and shot in many professional firearm training classes, saving notes and quotes from each one. Those early classes and the books I read really fueled my thirst to share what I was learning with others.

Because I’d taken so many classes and had a burning desire to help others learn, I started writing. At first, I just wrote for my own use. Later, I was participating on several different firearms discussion boards, and the things I’d written for my own use came in handy there. But I got tired of re-stating the things I’d already said elsewhere every time I posted on a message board, so eventually I thought, “Hey, why not put up a site of my own? One that isn’t designed for scary tactical people, but for ordinary people or even for women who want to know how to protect themselves in realistic ways?”

Thus was born my pink website about guns. The first version of Cornered Cat was a little rough around the edges, and over the top in feminine design. Its primary motif was pink lace – lots of pink lace. I wanted it to be super-clear that this was a site owned and run by a woman, not by a wanna-be man with a raging case of penis envy.

Back in real life, in 2003 I started working as an apprentice instructor at the Firearms Academy of Seattle. By 2005, I became a fully qualified instructor in my own right, so I have been teaching defensive firearms classes for a decade now as part of a team at a professional firearms training school. It’s work I love, and it makes a genuine difference in people’s lives.

Another thing I’ve enjoyed doing: writing for gun magazines. That happened at the urging of my friend and mentor Gila Hayes. She told me I needed to be doing that, so I did. I started with simple gun reviews and later branched out to other things. By 2008, I had become the editor at Concealed Carry Magazine. At the time, that publication had a circulation of only 20,000 people, but by the time I left four years later, it was around 60,000. During the same period, one of CCM’s columnists asked me to co-author a book with him. Mark Walters and I wrote Lessons from Armed America in 2009.

Meanwhile, my little website for women gun owners grew, and grew, and grew some more. Eventually, I started getting emails from people who wanted to see information about concealed carry for women in a book. That was a big step, but I did it. Thus was born The Cornered Cat: A Woman’s Guide to Concealed Carry, which was published in 2010. When people ask how long it took me to write the book, I never know quite what to say. Measured one way, it took about four months. Measured another way, it took eight years or more.

Although I was thrilled with my firearms training work and with my book sales, I wasn’t happy with where my professional life was headed. The work at CCM was taking all of my creative energy, so much so that I had nearly stopped writing on my own even though I love writing. There were also some organizational changes taking place behind the scenes at CCM’s parent company, good changes but not the direction I personally wanted to go with my life. I had to make a decision, and I did.

In fall 2012, I stepped out in a leap of faith and founded Cornered Cat LLC as a traveling defensive firearms training company that will focus primarily on the needs of concealed carry people. My goal for the next few years is to travel a lot and enjoy myself while teaching people how to protect themselves using firearms.

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How to write a letter

Over the past few weeks, I’ve had several people ask me for help putting a letter together. “I want to contact my representatives, but I don’t know what to say,” one woman wrote. “Can you give me some pointers?”

Gladly! I’m thrilled to hear so many women are stepping up to the plate to protect their basic human right to self-defense. This doesn’t surprise me, but it’s wonderful to see. If you’re new to the firearms community, you may not realize how quickly your rights can be stripped away from you, or how tirelessly other people worked (and for how long!) to get the freedom you now enjoy. With so many more people carrying guns than ever before, it’s no surprise that writing a letter supporting human rights might be a new task to some. It’s not hard, but there are some basic rules that make the job even easier.

The Questions

First, let’s get some simple questions out of the way.

  • Where do I send my letter? Start here: http://www.usa.gov/Contact/Elected.shtml. From that page, you can easily find out who your representatives are. If you have the time, I strongly suggest using the contact form on each politician’s home page, rather than going through an aggregate program offered by any lobbying group. The extra effort is worth it because your politician will be able to see that you sent the letter personally.
  • Should I send my letter through snail mail, or is email okay? Send an email. Years ago, many activists suggested that physical letters were more convincing. That was then, this is now. Now, everyone is used to doing business online – and things are moving quickly enough that if you don’t send it by email, it may not arrive in time to make any difference. If it makes you feel better, though, you can always print it off and send it by snail mail too. That way both bases are covered.
  • Should write my own letter, or is there a form letter I could send instead? I’m not going to give you a form letter, though I will do my best to give you some ideas for things to say. It’s important to write your own letter because form letters aren’t as convincing to our lawmakers as personal words are. Politicians figure, rightly, that if you’re not fired up enough to write your own letter, you probably won’t remember the issue at all when it’s time for their re-relection campaigns. By writing your own letter, you signal that you are serious and that this issue really does matter to you.
  • How often should I write? With things so unsettled right now, that’s a tricky question. If you have not contacted any of your politicians yet, you should do so immediately with a very general “OPPOSE gun control”-type message. As  you hear about specific bills coming into play, you can repeat your contact in reference to the specific bill. (“OPPOSE HB1234,” for example.) When tracking a specific piece of legislation, you should send a fresh letter every time something significant changes – when there’s a new amendment to an existing bill, when it moves from one chamber to another, when it moves out of committee to the floor. This should not take a lot of time, because each letter should be very short.
  • How long should my letter be? Keep it short. It should not take you hours to write, and it should not take them more than 30 seconds to read. Keep it short!

The Outline

Here is one very simple outline that has served me well. You can tweak it to suit your needs and dress it up to suit your own sense of style.

Dear [title and name],

I am writing to ask you to OPPOSE any form of gun control. [Or, to OPPOSE {specific bill number and common name for that bill.}] 

  • Reason One. Two or three sentences explaining this reason. Concluding sentence briefly restating reason.
  • Reason Two. Two or three sentences explaining this reason. Concluding sentence briefly restating reason.
  • Reason Three. Two or three sentences explaining this reason. Concluding sentence briefly restating reason.

Please OPPOSE any form of gun control.

Thank you for your time,

[your name]

[your address – to reinforce that you’re one of “their” voters]

Obviously, there are many other forms you can use, but the basic idea is not to ramble. Stick with a simple outline that makes sense to you. Offer only a few reasons to support your request, not every possible reason anyone could ever think of. Write only a few sentences to support each reason, not everything you know about the subject. Plug your own words into your simple outline, run it through your spell-checker, and hit the send key.

Don’t obsess! Just write, spell-check, and hit send. You’ll have an opportunity to say more later.

More Information

Okay, that covered the basics and the mechanics. But what should we say, and how do we support it? Here are the basic rules.

  • Be nice. This should go without saying, but I said it anyway.
  • Say thank you. Thank your politician for his or her time and hard work. You may not agree with everything this person does, but that’s okay. You’ll get further by building bridges than by building walls. Find the things you have in common and thank your politician for supporting those things. Or at least, thank them for reading your letter.
  • Keep it short.
  • Make it personal. It’s good to be able to reel off a dozen facts, but even a million cold-hearted facts will never have the impact of a personal story. Tell your politician why you care about the issues you do.
  • Tell a story. If you have a story you can tell, tell it! Stories are very powerful.
  • Make it factual. Don’t tire them out with millions of statistics, but do choose one or two numbers you yourself find extra-striking. (“An historic 54-seat swing in the House” is one very useful phrase right now.)  These facts provide important support for your politician in dealing with others.
  • Make it accurate. Don’t trust your memory. If you use a number, look it up – and look it up from more than one source.

Some Ammunition

Here are some links you may use to support your ideas. Please don’t just grab someone else’s words directly; that’s not cool. You can restate their basic arguments or use their ideas to spark your own work.

If you have other sources that you have found helpful, please add them in the comments section for others to find. Thanks!

***

Update: Here is a quick summary of the current status of national gun-related legislation from GunsSaveLives.net.

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Sunday thoughts

This week, one of my Facebook fans, Simply Darlene, wrote a very nice series of articles about gun ownership from a Christian woman’s perspective. You can find the series here:

Lest I steal some of her thunder, I’m not going to quote a whole lot here. But I loved this bit from Part Two: “I have run into the midst of a fight with both fists a flyin’ to stop someone from beating up my little sister. Back in high school, I got punched in the face and thusly knocked to the ground by a man who was easily one hundred pounds heavier than me. I scrambled up and when he came at me again, I hit him back so hard that his jaw bones cracked. Thankfully some folks came along and pulled the brute off of me. After that, I learned some self-defense skills and I’ve even dropped a fella to the ground with a whallop to his privates. I’m not proud of these moments, but I did the thing that needed doing to stop the evil thing from winning.”

Go read the whole thing.

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Dealing with social bullies

Here’s a question someone asked me recently, and what I told her.

Lately I am finding myself frequently on the receiving end of criticism, inflamed statements, and unfounded or irrational comments from casual acquaintances. Most of these happen on social media or in the work place. My natural tendency is to defend my views, and to try and help them understand better that responsible gun owners, like myself, are not the problem. Perhaps the best response is no response, to keep my lips zipped, which, when at work, is what I do. But with comments made to me outside of the workplace, I don’t want to have to hold my tongue. Can you offer any suggestions on how to be articulate and maybe, perhaps, effect a small change in the way they view responsible gun owners? The last thing I want to do is to come across as sarcastic (although I really do want to be sarcastic). I guess you could consider this almost a “Miss Manners” type question! I appreciate your taking the time to read my words, and am hoping you or your alterego, Gunhilda, will have some sage advice for me!

Oh, dear – if you don’t want to be sarcastic, perhaps we’d better not ask Gunhilda for advice about what to say! I’m sure she’d be funny, but I’m not sure she’d be helpful on this one.

Right now, there’s a very determined social effort to shove gun owners back in the closet. Those of us who have owned guns for a long time have been there before, and I at least am never going to step into that closet again. It wasn’t a comfortable place to live.

The past four or five years have been an absolutely golden time for gun owners, as it almost overnight became socially acceptable to own guns for self defense in a lot of areas where historically it really wasn’t. So I think the small shift in social attitudes back toward the negative side in some circles has probably taken a lot of us by surprise, because a lot of us never experienced the giant level of nastiness gun owners used to deal with all the time. That’s a good thing! Still, it might comfort you to know that it’s happened before in a much more extreme form, and we as a community overcame it by each of us, individually, being brave enough to stand up and be counted.

Here’s an amazing visual record of how many states have passed different types of concealed carry laws over the past few years. I love this graphic because it lets us visualize how things have changed, not just on a legal level, but also on a social level. Those changes in the law were driven by ordinary people saying, “Yes, I own guns and care about my right to protect myself with them.”

What I’m getting at is that even though things feel negative right now, you’re not alone and that’s not where our society really is. Given the record number of women who own guns and the huge upswing in new gun owners, the negativity you’re dealing with right now is almost certainly a very temporary change. But that will only be true if we each individually and all collectively hold onto our social courage. If we all shut up, the bullies will win.

It really is a form of social bullying, when someone tries to make you feel ashamed or embarrassed about something important to you. Appeasing bullies never really works; it just tends to make them bolder and more insistent. So it will take some social bravery to face down the bullies and hold onto the gains we’ve made in recent years.

On a personal level, you’re right to keep your lip buttoned at work because that’s your employer’s time, not yours. You may want to memorize one or two gentle mind-openers that you can use when someone is really insistent that you must express an opinion. For me, I’ve always found that referring to something small and personal often helps. Something like, “I was sure glad I had my firearm the night two men tried to rob me. But this isn’t a good conversation for me to have at work, so …” followed by a quick subject change back to something work-related.

Among people on Facebook and other social media, it’s both trickier and not so tricky. You can make it clear that you expect people to be kind and polite to you at all times. They don’t have to agree with you, but anyone who tries to shame you really does not deserve access to you and your circle of friends. If you post a beautiful picture of your family members at the range, and someone says something rude about it, you don’t have to put up with that. If some writes you a poison-pen letter that pokes at all your most painful vulnerabilities, you don’t have to accept it. If someone threatens you – either individually or collectively – it’s entirely right to speak up and say, “That’s wrong.” It’s up to you whether to simply delete those comments without reply, or whether to confront the person about their rudeness, but you should never let someone else’s rudeness shame you into silence.

Again: this is bullying, pure and simple. If you stand up for your right to be treated with kindness and respect, bullies tend to back down and go away. If you cave or cringe, they tend to get noisier. It has nothing to do with whether they agree with you, so don’t get hung up on that part. It has everything to do with insisting on your right to expect basic standards of civility from people who interact with you. If someone is snarky or rude to you, you have every right to say, “That’s not an acceptable way to treat me.” If someone is rude to one of your friends, you can tell them you will not accept them treating your friends with disrespect. This is very, very different from saying, “You’re not allowed to disagree with me on this subject,” and much more powerful.

Along the same lines, we’re facing a backlash driven by both ignorance and fear. “Ignorance” is such a dirty word in our culture, but all it means is that someone doesn’t know something they need to learn. This means education can go a long way toward helping people understand what you do and why you do it. After you have settled the “I will be treated with kindness and respect” issue (not before!) you can tackle gently educating your friends. This doesn’t have to be a big long hairy deal. Rather, stick with the simplest things you do know and can easily explain.

Stories are always powerful. If you have a story of your own, be brave enough to share it with others, to whatever level of detail you’re comfortable with. Pay attention to the news too. For instance, you can talk about stories like this to explain why an ordinary good person might 1) want to be armed; 2) want to be armed at home; 3) want to have more than a few rounds of ammunition available to her; 4) might not be able to call the police instead of protecting herself; 5) might want to own a gun even though she has children. There are lots more lessons in that story if you think about it, but of course you’re not going to bring every single point out. Just choose one, put it into a single sentence, and run with it. Keep it super short and really sweet.

If someone uses a phrase that makes no sense, you can gently correct the wrong idea without making your friend feel bad. But you can only do that if you understand a little about the mechanics yourself, which means you might want to do a little studying about how guns work. It’s also good if you know a little bit about the history of gun control or why semi-automatic firearms became so common, and know a little bit about how guns help reduce violent crime.

But most of us can’t carry numbers around in our heads that well. We can all remember our personal stories, though, and we can all share stories of things that have happened to others. Stories have power.

If you remember nothing else when talking to your friends, remember this: your story has power, and your life is worth defending.

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Revolver trigger finger

Many years back, as a fairly new shooter, I took a two-day defensive handgun class. At that time, although I practiced regularly with a semi-auto, I’d never really learned to run a revolver and felt as though I needed to. So for the class I borrowed a friend’s Smith & Wesson 686 L-frame revolver, intending to learn the basic revolver manipulations under an instructor’s watchful eye.

Firing in double-action mode throughout the weekend, I found the trigger pull long and heavy, but butter-smooth, and the gun itself was astonishingly accurate in my hands. Even though it was a lot of work to pull the trigger, the gun was still lots of fun to shoot and I was enjoying it – right up until I ran into unexpected trouble.

Late in the afternoon on Day One of the class, I rolled the trigger halfway back, and then was shocked to suddenly discover that I literally could not complete the pull. My finger just froze! It was a very weird sensation. At first I thought something mechanical was wrong with the gun, so I called the instructor over to give it a try. The instructor dry fired a few times and said, “It’s not the gun.”

After I relaxed and shook the tension out my hand, I tried pulling the trigger again and it worked without a hitch. No problem with the next shot, or with the next string of fire, but two shots after that my finger quit entirely for the rest of the day. My trigger finger simply could not get that trigger back again for love nor money.

The next morning, despite some mild swelling and minor soreness, my trigger finger seemed to be working okay, so I continued using the revolver. It wasn’t long before I experienced the same “my hand just quit” sensation that I’d felt the day before. I finally finished the class by pulling the trigger with both index fingers, taking lots of breaks in between shots.

What in the world was going on here?

Experienced revolver shooters are probably grinning at this point, having accurately diagnosed the cause of my mysterious trouble: lack of hand strength. The 686 I’d borrowed features a 12-pound trigger pull in double action. Do the math: 12 pounds per pull meant that by the end of the weekend, after firing 500 live rounds and performing at least that many dryfires, my poor little trigger finger had moved at least three tons in cumulative effort. No wonder it was pooped!

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Carjacking attempt

We always have a picture in our heads of what crime looks like, and sometimes it looks like things we don’t expect. Take this story, for example. Not too long after we got married, my husband and I invited one of my high school buddies to come visit us from out of town. I’ll call him Keith, because that’s his name – and incidentally, Keith, if you’re reading this, it’s about time you got back in touch.

When Keith arrived, I asked how his trip went. He replied by telling an offbeat, funny story about an attempted crime against him. Here’s how it went down.

Somewhere on the long drive, Keith needed fuel and a cup of coffee, so he stopped at a combination convenience store and gas station. Just as he pulled into his spot, an angry-looking man he didn’t recognize came running over and pounded both fists on the hood of Keith’s car, leaving a dent. Looking Keith right in the eye through the windshield, he raised his fists to do it again.

Keith did what any red-blooded young man in his 20’s would probably do: he hopped out of the driver’s seat, boiling mad, ready to___! Just as Keith jumped out to take care of business, the guy scooted clear around the back of the car and slid into the now-empty driver’s seat.

Of course Keith had left the door open and the key in the ignition.

Textbook, right?

Keith grabbed the door handle, trying to yank the door open so he could get the guy out of his driver’s seat and save the car. The guy hadn’t been quite fast enough to get the door locked as he slid in.

Cut to a visual: Keith pulling as hard as he could on the outside handle to get the door open, bad guy pulling as hard as he could on the inside handle to keep it closed.

That was about to change, because of one teensy tiny little detail the bad guy hadn’t noticed – Keith’s big Akita dog snoring in the back seat. Akitas are known for being a wee bit territorial, and Bear was no exception. A well-mannered dog, he knew it was polite to greet visitors, and he did so with a devastatingly loud and completely unexpected WOOF! about an inch from the guy’s right ear.

New visual: Keith pushing as hard as he could on the outside of the door to keep it closed, bad guy pushing as hard as he could on the inside of the door to get it open.

And a sound: WOOF! GRRRWOOF! WOOF! WOOF! GRRRWOOF! WOOF!

Just before the dog lost patience, the bad guy came to his senses and tumbled out the passenger side door. He left the area at high speed.

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