A few weeks ago I was at an outdoor arts festival when someone asked me what the logo on my shirt meant. I explained that I was a firearms instructor, and that the logo stood for "Rummel's Gun Group". Before I was done I could see The Fear start.
Everybody who shoots knows what I'm talking about. You see it in their eyes, their expression. All of a sudden you're not a person but a dangerous beast that might suddenly lash out and kill everyone around you. A Deathbeast.
There's two reasons for this. The first is the very natural wariness that the helpless feel when confronted with someone who can end their lives in an instant. Simply owning a firearm means that you're an instrument of destruction, at least in their minds. This is a silly attitude, completely irrational. But being irrational about firearms seems to be a badge of honor to some people.
The second reason is not their fault. In fact it's ours.
Or some of us, at least. We all know the type. They're the ones who dream out loud of shooting someone (and loud is the correct way to describe them). They let you know that they're ready, even eager for trouble. It seems that the killin' is the most important thing.
Now I don't know how any of you feel about these guys, but they've always made me feel a little uncomfortable. Not because I'm afraid of them, but because I wish they could express themselves with a little more class.
We devote ourselves to this hobby of ours for different reasons. Some of us simply enjoy the art and discipline it takes to develop the skill to hit what we're aiming at. Every time we go to the range it's a competition, a struggle to see if we can force ourselves to have the steady nerves and calm mind needed to do better than we did the last time. It's very personal, fiercely intense. Every one of us feels this to one degree or another, even on the bad days when we just can't hit the target to save our lives.
Then there are the hunters. They set the targets out at 50 or 100 yards (depending if they're using a rifle or shotgun), and they go to school. For these guys every day at the range is a voyage of discovery. Different loads, different projectiles, different weapons. What's the best stock for them? What's the best tool to harvest the game? Can they see themselves hiking over hill and through overgrown dale in the freezing rain with this heavy weight dangling from one aching shoulder? I've watched them working at it, putting holes in paper on the outdoor range, and I can say that the ancient Zen masters don't have anything to teach these guys.
There's the people who like to plink away. The gun is a tool, and they have a lot of fun trying to shoot out the X ring. When they get to the range it's like they've gone to the amusement park. They don't go home with a kewpie doll or a stuffed teddy bear, but that half hour is the best time of the week.
Finally there's the grim ones, the serious ones. They're friendly enough if you talk to them, but developing and maintaining their skill is a responsibility. They get in some range time because they think they have to, a burden that they shoulder because they think that they should.
That's me, right there. Friendly to everyone who wants to approach me, smiling and with a word of encouragement to everyone who's struggling with a new gun. But watch me shoot and you can see that I'm doing this as if it was the most important thing in the world. That's because sometimes, in the middle of the night when I can't sleep and I'm lying awake in the dark, I'm deathly afraid that it will be. And there's plenty of people who look at this in exactly the same way.
Every so often you see an item in the newspaper about some nutbag who shoots up a bunch of innocent and unarmed people. Talk to someone like me and they'll tell you that they wish they had been there. We wish we were in the same room with the nutter, the guy who has a weapon and is desperate to hurt people.
By any reasonable criteria this is completely insane. We're fantasizing about putting ourselves in harm's way, about allowing someone to shoot at us! This is hardly a sound strategy to a long and healthy life.
This isn't because we want to kill someone and the nutbag shooter provides a chance to do it in a legal way. Instead we want to stop the violence before some innocent person dies.
This isn't an indication of intelligence, either. Anyone who we might help would probably not appreciate it, and even if we managed to get through the ordeal unscathed we'd have to face another ordeal in the courtroom when the perp's family sued us for everything we owned. Why in the world would we be willing, even eager, to take incredible risks and stand as a shield between innocent people and someone who's eager to end their lives?
No real reason except that we think we can make a difference. No one forces this responsibility on us, we seek it out and shoulder it all on our own. I think the Japanese call this sort of thing giri.
There is one thing about the nightmare scenario that I fear more than anything else. It's the gnawing doubt that keeps me going back to the range every week, paying all this money for ammunition and range time. It's very personal, something that Real Men aren't supposed to admit, but it supplies a big chunk of my motivation.
If something does happen and people are depending on me I don't want to let them down.
Comments (7)
Wow. Well put.
Posted by Dale Osborn | April 12, 2007 7:55 PM
Posted on April 12, 2007 19:55
Excellent post. A lot of people who don't shoot (and even a fair number who do) tell me how relaxing it is to put rounds downrange.
I never find it relaxing. Shooting is very stressful for me - it takes lots of focus and concentration to shoot well and quickly. And if you ever need your gun for something serious, you're going to need to shoot better and faster than you've ever shot before.
Posted by Mulliga | April 13, 2007 12:08 AM
Posted on April 13, 2007 00:08
HI! Got here through Annie's blog.
You know, I have been shooting since I was big enough to hold a gun. As a woman, I can tell you that people think I'm crazy for owning one but when they find out I have more than one, they usually make some remark about PMS and my inability to control myself. They are morons. As for the relaxation part, I actually do find it relaxing for some reason. When I'm really stressed, it helps. Not sure why or how, but it does.
Posted by Pookie Sixx | April 13, 2007 3:27 PM
Posted on April 13, 2007 15:27
Got here through Annie's blog.
Thank you kindly for stopping by, and thanks for taking the time to leave a comment.
But I'm afraid that I'm not familiar with Annie. Do you have an URL?
James
Posted by James R. Rummel | April 13, 2007 8:46 PM
Posted on April 13, 2007 20:46
Hmmm... is that Target World?
Posted by ChuBlogga | April 18, 2007 12:18 AM
Posted on April 18, 2007 00:18
Hmmm... is that Target World?
If you mean the picture, it is just a generic range somewhere. I have seen the same setup with the same equipment in at least three states.
So, could it be Target World? Sure!
James
Posted by James R. Rummel | April 18, 2007 12:46 AM
Posted on April 18, 2007 00:46
I guess I find myself under that last category. After I identified with the description, I read on and thought you were going to speak ill of these folks. Surprise, surprise; you're one of them!
I train because I know that if I don't I might not be able to perform when it really counts. I train and I think about different situations I might find myself in, and the best way to handle them.
At one point I thought my preoccupation was becoming unhealthy, and that I should stop. After about a week of thinking about it, I decided that being prepared for a situation where lives are on the line is worth my time, money, and worry.
Excellent blog, by the way.
Posted by existingthing | April 19, 2007 9:10 PM
Posted on April 19, 2007 21:10