How To Carry Concealed
Or, The
Complete Idiot’s Guide to Concealed Carry, For People Who
Aren’t Complete Idiots
Congratulations!
You’ve
decided you want to take responsibility for your personal safety
and carry a firearm with you on a regular basis. This is one of
the most adult decisions you can make, because you’ve realized
that there WILL NOT be a cop around when you need one. In fact,
criminals are really, really good at making sure there’s no
cops around when their potential victims need one: That’s
why they’re called “criminals” and not “felons”.
I digress.
This isn’t
going to be a post about equipment or training, it’s about
getting yourself ready to carry a gun wherever and whenever it’s
permitted. I’m going to assume you’re one of thousands
and thousands of people out there who own a gun and have
recently acquired a concealed permit, but you’re not sure
if you want to carry your gun all the time.
Which you do.
We’ll get to why you want to do that in a minute. Let’s
start off with the how. And please realize that I’m not a
lawyer or someone in who’s served in the military or police.
What I am, however, is a person who’s gone down the road you’re
about to travel.
If you don’t
have a holster for your gun, buy one.
Many a pixel
has been plotted over which kind of holster works best, but for
starters, I’d suggest an Outside The Waistband (OWB) holster
from a “Name brand” manufacturer like Galco,
Bianchi,
Comp-Tac
or Blade-Tech.
And wear something to cover it, like an unbuttoned shirt or light
jacket.
Plan on buying
another after that one, because holsters are kinda like music: What
works for me probably won’t work for you, and I change what
I listen to depending on my environment and who I’m with.
Same thing with how I carry a gun: I change what I carry and how
I carry it depending on the circumstances I’m in. In general,
though, I listen to 80′s alternative and carry inside the
waist (IWB) on my right hip. I carry there consistently because
I don’t want to have to think about where my gun is if I need
it, and I’ve learned through buying a bunch of holsters that
IWB carry is what I like best.
Holsters aren’t
an option. You want a holster because it’s just about the
only way to carry a gun safely: Not only is sticking a gun into
your waistband unsafe for others, you
can also lose some things that are very dear to you if an accident
occurs. As added bonus, having a holster for your gun is one
way cops know you’re on their side if they have to stop and
frisk you.
Don’t
carry just your gun.
How will you
call the cops if don’t have your phone? How will know if what
you’re facing is a mugger or grandma on a dark night if you
don’t have flashlight? There’s four things you need
to carry with you besides your gun and holster and
I’ve listed them over here.
Learn the
laws of your state first.
It’s
up to you to know the circumstances and consequences of carrying
a concealed weapon in your state. Can you carry in schools? Churches?
What happens if you walk into a business with a “No Guns Allowed”
sign? Is there such a thing as businesses that can ban guns in your
state? Can you carry a gun into a nuclear power station or military
base? (Short answer: No you don’t, that’s a VERY bad
idea.).
Alan Korwin
is a leading author on gun laws, and he
has several books on the gun laws of America that are “must
haves” for anyone who owns a gun, much less wants to carry
one with them.
Also, I recommend
getting to know a lawyer in your area who deals with firearms, and
signing
up for one of the self-defense insurance programs out there
BEFORE you need their services.
Get to know
your gun and use it safely.
Chances are,
you had to pass a shooting qualification to get your concealed carry
permit, but if you can’t remember the last time you practiced,
it’s probably time to head to the range. And learn
the rules of gun safety as if your life depends on it, because,
well, it does.
Think about
what you’re getting, and what you’re giving up.
As my friend
Caleb said, carrying
a firearm means giving up the luxury to be angry. If you carry
a sidearm, you have to consider the results of your actions and
reactions a whole lot more carefully than if you don’t.
What are you
getting in return? You’re getting the ability to defend your
life and the lives of your loved ones on the worst day of your lives.
If being angry means more to you than that, please, for love of
God and everyone around you, don’t carry a gun.
Why carry
a gun all the time.
Now we come
down to the crux of the matter. The simple fact of the matter is,
you don’t get to choose when you’ll need it. If you
think you’re going somewhere where you might need a gun, DON”T
GO THERE. Cops have SWAT teams to go places where they don’t
feel safe, you don’t have that luxury.
Criminals don’t
play by your rules. Once you accept that, and learn to see the world
how they might see it, you’ll be safer. We call that sort
of thing “situational awareness” and it means the difference
between having to use your gun and not having to use it.
Think of it
this way: Have you been in a car accident? Did that accident happen
when you expected it? Do you wear a seat belt only when you expect
an accident to happen?
So why carry
a gun only when you think there’s danger around?
How to carry
a gun all the time.
Step One: Carry
a gun with you all the time.
Step Two: There
is no Step Two.
I know that’s
kinda silly, but that’s about all there is to it. Start by
wearing your gun around the house, and carry it loaded, because
an unloaded gun is kinda useless, isn’t it? It’s going
to feel a bit weird at first to have a gun hanging off your hip.
Relax, you’ll get used to it. Then wear it outside the house
on something you do everyday.
We call it
The
WalMart Walk, but what it is doing something you’re used
to doing in a way you’re not used to doing it. And relax,
your gun isn’t showing and no, no one else besides you is
freaking out because you’re carrying a gun. In fact, I can
predict right now what will happen the first time you walk outside
the store with a concealed handgun on you.
Absolutely
nothing at all. So relax.
Just be confident
that you are now your own first responder. And stay safe. And have
fun.
Reprinted
with permission from TeamGunBlogger.com.
March
11, 2013
©
2013 TeamGunBlogger.com
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