There exist an extremely dangerous and ill-conceived
idea among some gun enthusiasts that simply having a
firearm will provide all the self-defense protection a
person will need. Just this past weekend I had a
gentleman who stopped by my booth at a trade show
commenting, “yeah I don’t need any self-defense
training because I have my Permit to carry….”. I asked
this particular gentleman if he had participated in any
additional training after taking his State Mandated
Permit to carry course, such as Tactical Pistol, Knife
Defense Training, Weapon Retention, etc. The gentlemen
responded that he had not. I continued on to ask if his
Permit to Carry Instructor taught him how to properly
carry their firearms, draw from their holster, how to
perform emergency reloads and how to use cover and
concealment in a gunfight. This gentleman simply
responded, “ I don’t need any of that fancy stuff, I
have been around guns my whole life”. As the
conversation unfolded the gentlemen volunteered that he
does not practice drawing from his holster, does not
practice his reloading skills or even dry fire
exercises. The final straw was when he commented he
only live fires his carry weapon about twice a year. I
politely removed myself from this particular gentleman
and continued with the business of the day knowing that
some people prefer to live in their own self-deluded
belief that they could protect themselves if the time
came to it without any realistic training.
The art of self-defense combines the aspects of
biomechanical techniques, mindset, training and tools.
Without in-depth knowledge and training in all these
areas of self-defense, a person is unprepared for the
reality of violence. Guns, knives, Martial Arts,
violence awareness and prevention seminars, etc are
simply tools that one can use in a self-defense
scenario, but by themselves alone they are not the
embodiment of self-defense.
Now I love a person with confidence as much as the next
person but lets be honest, self-confidence is one thing,
self-delusion is another. Just because I have been
driving the majority of my life, does not mean I can win
a NASCAR race. Throughout my career as an instructor I
have always been amazed that there are some people who
prefer to ignore reality and believe that some small
token of training or purchase of a weapon is all they
need, ignoring the fact that any self-defense skill is
perishable and may not have been appropriately
understood in the first place. Many people buy a
firearm for either home or self-protection and believe
that just having the gun on the persons body or in the
persons home is the only self-defense measure needed,
ignoring the fact that anyone can have their own weapon
turned against them.
My experience as Law Enforcement, self-defense and
firearms instructor for the past 20 years has taught me
many lessons and I feel I can no longer ignore these
dangerous myths and misconceptions that have already
cost people their lives. For some, it has become more
convenient to believe a fallacy then to take action and
train and prepare.
Myth 1: “I have a gun and that is the only
self-defense I need ”(or “I have a permit to carry.”)
A gun by itself is simply that; a gun, a tool and
nothing more. Loading the pistol and firing at a
stationary target is not self-defense. Having a Permit
to Carry a Pistol alone is not self-defense. From
1993-2002, in the United States, there were 636 Police
Officers feloniously killed in the line of duty.
The majority of these officers died engaged in an
encounter they knew could potentially end their lives.
Unfortunately, 78.6% of the 636 officers killed in the
line of duty never even cleared leather. What makes Joe
average permit holder think they will do any better then
Professional Law Enforcement Personnel who enter life or
death situations every day and train for these types of
encounters regularly? Even trained Officers who survive
gunfights often miss the bad guy they’re aiming at. It
is very different when your target is screaming, running
and shooting at you. Very few civilians and permit
holders ever receive training or practice weapon
retention techniques ignoring the fact that from
1993-2002 there were 46 officers who were feloniously
filled by their own weapons.
Many staunch guns advocates would rather ignore this
fact and dismiss it as anti-gun rhetoric and embrace
their false belief that the gun itself is protection and
personally owned firearms poses no threat to the owner
themselves.
Myth 2: “I’m a combat vet and I saw the worst
fighting…. it’s like riding a bike”
Fact: All self-defense skills are perishable.
You will respond in a life and death situation the
way you train. If you are negligent in your
self-defense handgun skills training, you and your body
will respond in such a manner. Surviving wars, fights
or earning a black belt, etc alone does not prepare us
for the ever-changing brutal reality of violence unless
we are constantly training and updating our skills.
Surviving such situations does give us insight into the
reality of violence and life or death situations, but it
does not make us impervious to bullets. If we ignore
the lessons of the battlefield and consciously choose
not too train in a realistic and effective self-defense
manner we are ignoring a life lesson imparted upon us.
Many Heavy Weight Boxing Champions have shown us the
dangers of complacency. Many past Boxing Greats have
rested on their laurels, accomplishment and egos and
allowed themselves the luxury of slacking off on their
daily training regiments believing that their past
greatness will still win the day, only to be shocked and
dismayed when some unknown under-rated boxer steals the
world title from them. A gunfight is no different.
Just because you survived a War does not mean you will
survive the crack head breaking into your house at 2 in
the morning.
Myth 3: “I carry a gun every day, so I have
nothing to fear from knives”
Fact: Under 21 feet a knife will win every time
against an untrained shooter. Many people refuse to
believe this until they see an actual demonstration.
Time after time, Many instructors in the law enforcement
community demonstrate the “Tueller” drill and watch as
the faces of our officers show concern and fear because
their myth of “a gun as a superior weapon” was
demolished by this simple demonstration where a knife
wielding attacker covers the 21 feet and cut the
officers throat with a training blade while they fumble
with their weapon. Knives are actually one of the
biggest threats to officers. Knives are a dangerous
weapon that can be employed at point of contact,
creating massive permanent wound cavities, causing
mechanical and biological trauma with excessive blood
loss leading to shock and death. 10% of all officers
who are shot in the line of duty die whereas 30% of all
officers attacked with a bladed weapon die.
These facts become truly terrifying when we also
consider that the majority of all self-defense shootings
occur under 10 feet, which is well within the kill zone
range of bladed weapons. Dealing with bladed weapons is
actually an extremely important training aspect for Law
Enforcement Instructors and we must constantly be
training ourselves and our officers on the latest
techniques and procedures so we can defeat the
knife-wielding suspect while on duty, especially since
most knife attacks against officers occur either during
the interview process within the personal space or
during an attempt at arrest.
The essence of self-defense is the ability to defend
oneself against an attacker using any and all necessary
violence of action to end the threat against ones life.
Any weapon is just a tool that we use in defending
ourselves. Whether one uses their own body, a knife or
gun to defend them-selves, the principle remains the
same that to survive an attack on your life, one must
realistically train and be honest with oneself about
their self-defense skills.
A gun is a tool that can be used in self-defense, not
self-defense itself. People who have guns and do not
receive additional training are a danger to themselves
and others. Law abiding gun owners in America have a
moral and ethical responsibility to train themselves and
acknowledge the fact that a gun is a tool that can be
used to protect or harm the innocent. Unrealistic
self-defense ideologies only add to the gun problem in
America and these misguided beliefs only get people
killed, not save lives.
About the Author: Michael Andrew Lord VanBlaricum is a
Certified Law Enforcement Instructor, Certified NRA
Instructor and Master Black Belt Instructor in Hapkido
Hoshinsul and Owner and Chief
Instructor of LordVan
Tactical LLC. To contact Michael or learn more about
LordVan Tactical LLC self-defense philosophy or seminars
visit
www.lordvantactical.com or call 651-324-6854.