SureFire

Gunfighter Moment – Daryl Holland

I haven’t given up on you if I have stopped correcting you on something that you continue to get wrong. Some folks take longer than others due to a lack of hand and eye coordination or having a “Training scar”, which is muscle memory built in by doing something incorrectly and repeatedly over a long period of time. We have to move on, so as long as it’s not a safety concern, the person struggling with a bad habit will need to put their own time in and work on it themselves to undo their “Training scar”. Breaking a bad habit is easier said than done. You may have heard that women are good marksmanship students, which is because they begin with zero experience therefore they have zero bad habits. Perform the perfect repetition to develop the perfect muscle memory. It’s that simple!

An example is trying to fix someone’s grip after they have used the wrong grip for several years. Backward thumbs may feel stronger because you have used it for years and you may even experience a decline in performance at first, but just keep working for that perfect grip and one day it will feel right…Which is usually after they start holding tighter with the non-firing hand.

Some shooting skills can be developed without going to the range such as “Dry firing” while working on your grip. Training with an empty gun doesn’t sound sexy, but I believe it is very under rated, especially for beginners…Darwin note; please keep ammo separate when “Dry firing”.

“When the student is ready, the master will appear”.
– Buddhist Proverb

Respectfully, Daryl Holland

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Daryl Holland is a retired U.S. Army Sergeant Major with over 20 years of active duty experience, 17 of those years in Special Operations. Five years with the 1st Special Forces Group (SFG) and 12 years in the 1st SFOD-Delta serving as an Assaulter, Sniper, Team Leader, and OTC Instructor.

He has conducted several hundred combat missions in Afghanistan, Iraq, Bosnia, Philippines, and the Mexican Border. He has conducted combat missions in Afghanistan’s Hindu Kush Mountains as a Sniper and experienced Mountaineer to the streets of Baghdad as an Assault Team Leader.

He has a strong instructor background started as an OTC instructor and since retiring training law abiding civilians, Law Enforcement, U.S. Military, and foreign U.S. allied Special Operations personnel from around the world.

Gunfighter Moment is a weekly feature brought to you by Alias Training & Security Services. Each week Alias brings us a different Trainer and in turn, they offer some words of wisdom.

7 Responses to “Gunfighter Moment – Daryl Holland

  1. Jsockamotto says:

    Dry fire is one of the greatest ways to train for shooters at any level. Shooting is one of the few sports I have been involved with that just about anyone can do successfully if they practice. Most shooters I know that are great have zero athletic background. They practiced a lot though. Dry fire was part of it.

  2. Paul McCain says:

    Wisdom. Let us heed it.

  3. pbr549xxx says:

    Its like “shadow boxing” for Jump Master School.

  4. 18Derp says:

    “You may have heard that women are good marksmanship students, which is because they begin with zero experience therefore they have zero bad habits.”

    …. Because men are born with firearm experience? Everyone starts with no experience so that whole comment makes no sense.

    Now, I agree that women are very commonly good shots (in my experience) but I think it’s because of other factors. Less ego means they actually listen to instruction. Less tendency to flinch for whatever reason in my experience training. But none of these are “because women start with no experience” that’s just a weird logical gap.

    • Diddler says:

      More often than not, men have already had some type of experience-even if that experience is just a concept I their mind of how things work, based on watching movies and TV. Then the ego rolls in and makes them less receptive to instruction that deviates from their “norm.” It’s ego that causes a dude with poor technique to tell the dude who is trying to show them better mouse traps, “you didn’t perform better 9/10 times because of superior technique, just you were lucky/I was unlucky.” That is arrogance induced ignorance. I’ve seen that an embarrassing number of times in our ilk.

    • SSD says:

      Don’t you know? Every American male is born knowing how to drive a race car, shoot a gun, grill a steak, fuck like a porn star, give sound legal advice (including constitutional law) and conduct a detailed chemical analysis that will hold up in court.