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- October 31, 2005
Safe Shooting, Pardner!
October 31, 2005If you’re looking for the PDF, scroll down to the bottom of this post
UPDATE 2015: An updated design is available for a dollar donation!About a year and a half ago, I was in California for the bachelor party of one of my very best friends. He decided (after consultation from the missus-to-be) against the usual stripper-assisted drunken revelry, and thought that we’d all have a good time bonding instead at the nearby shooting range. After blowing through $200 in ammunition, I was hooked, and resolved to learn more about shooting as soon as I got back to New Hampshire, though the prospect of learning how was rather intimidating.
Since then I’ve learned how to operate a handgun, and I’ve been introducing my friends to shooting as well. I recommend taking a certified course, but I find the personal introduction helps people get over their initial misconceptions and fears about firearms, which means they have fun a lot sooner. Knowledge is power! And as it so happens, I’ve been playing around with InDesign CS2, so I created a reference for next time I’m introducing people to shooting. You can download a PDF at the end of this post. After the story.Starting from Scratch
Shooting is something I am self-conscious about because of my Chinese ethnicity; walking into a gun store filled with scowling white hunters can be an intimidating experience :-) As it turns out, they just scowl at everyone until you become a known quantity-it helps to be polite and serious about conducting business, and once they realize you’re there for the same reason they are things lighten up–but that’s a story for another day. A second barrier: my family background is strongly entrenched in the Church, and didn’t offer guidance regarding firearms that (I suspect) American families with a strong attachment to the “Old West” would have–you know, like Dad grew up playing Cowboys and Indians, or Grandma was a sharpshooter in Montana. Anyway, Mom and Dad thought it best to prohibit me from owning war-related toys; I still remember the sting of disappointment when, at age 7, I was given my first squirt gun. It was shaped like the head of “Tom” from “Tom and Jerry”, had terrible range, didn’t shoot straight, and looked absolutely ridiculous. To add further insult to injury, my sister’s squirt gun (“Jerry”) shot farther and straighter, annoying me to no end. When I was 10, a friend of mine took pity on me and gave me a cap gun he didn’t want; this was promptly confiscated. I got a lecture on the evil of guns (“Guns are bad!”), and I never saw it again.
Denied war toys, I drew them instead–planes, ships, tanks…and lots of guns. I studied diagrams of the venerable Model 1911–one of the seminal American handguns of the 20th century–from our 1976 edition of the World Book Encyclopedia. In the 10th grade, I started reading gun magazines smuggled into Taiwan from the Phillippines–then under martial law–by the very same friend who threw his shooting range bachelor party years later. In addition to soaking up a lot of “forbidden” knowledge, I read about the exploits of real-life Texas Border Patrolman Skeeter Skelton. I later wrote a story influenced by this guy in High School and won an award from the English Department. I think my teachers were struck by my depiction of a dystopian world gone awry…but just between you and me, it was just an excuse to draw the gun (shown right) and write about its many interesting design features :-) I kept up on my reading after college–as I worked in the video game industry, it sort of counted as background research .My first contact with a real gun was in Florida, when I took a 4-hour Concealed Carry License (CCL) course with a bunch of fellow video game developers and artists from work. The first thing that the instructor asked me during the class was whether I was Samoan, which he used as the lead into a story about the mighty .45ACP cartridge, because the standard-issue .38s were just not stopping them fast enough. Although I am not Samoan, this anecdote didn’t exactly put me at ease. Though I suppose for a brief instant I helped the instructor visualize just what the U.S. Marines were up against in the South Pacific, back in the 1800s…yay. After the written test, we got to shot about 20 rounds into a target about 10 feet away from us, thus earning the right to apply for a concealed carry license. I shot very well; apparently, all those years of using computer mice pay off big when it comes to accurate hand control when shooting. I never did get my Florida CCL because I moved back to New England soon afterwards. I didn’t shoot again until that bachelor party in California.
Being Informed, Being Safe
Despite how you may personally feel about guns and violence, I think a rational person should know something about how they actually work. The media and television have fostered a distorted view of how to actually handle a gun, and this ignorance could get you hurt. For example, you might find one somewhere and need to transport it to somewhere safe. Or you may be in the vicinity of someone who is handling one, and with a few cues you will be able to tell whether or not that person is “safe” or a threat. Or–and hopefully this never happens–you may actually need to use one when the shit hits the fan. And of course shooting is fun, as NPR/BoingBoing media sprite Xeni Jardin discovered a few months ago with the help of an experienced shooter. Lacking an experienced shooter for my own guidance, I retook the recommended courses (finding a far better instructor here in New Hampshire) and joined a group that meets at my local range that I found out about during the lessons. I was fortunate to have a public shooting range nearby that allowed me to find the right instructor and start learning the right way to do things.
If you’re starting from scratch, just finding people who shoot is a challenge, because the serious groups tend to be low key. Once you find them, they are the nicest people you’ll meet…patient, grounded, and motivated to learn. The Fundamental Rules of Gun Safety, the NRA Safety Rules are pretty much the standard; states that require licensing will test you on these very rules! When I’m introducing gun safety to people, I focus on the first two rules:
- ALWAYS keep the gun pointed in a safe direction.
- ALWAYS keep your finger off the trigger until ready to shoot.
If you follow these rules to the letter, you will be 100% safe. You absolutely should have an experienced shooting buddy with you to watch what you’re doing; this will help develop conscious safety at all times. Ultimately, you want to be unconsciously safe, which is when you are safe without even thinking about it. But before you get there, you might do one of the following gaffes:
- Looking at the side of the gun, inadvertently pointing it to your side instead of keeping it safely pointed downrange. The solution is to turn your body, not the gun.
- Putting your finger on the trigger when you pick up the gun, because that’s what you think you’re supposed to do. No! You do that only when it’s time to shoot.
- Conversely, not taking your finger off the trigger when you’re done shooting, because you’ll tend to look at the target to see how you did. Oops…forgot to be safe.
- Treating a gun as “safe to point around” because “the safety is on” or “the gun is already unloaded”. No! Treat the gun loaded all the time, because it really might be. Plus, the people around you will feel a lot better not having a gun pointed at them, accidentally or not.
You should, of course, know and understand all the safety rules. However, these rules presume some knowledge about operating a gun (like, how to unload one), or how you’ll be using a gun (the “keep gun unloaded” rule, for example, makes no sense if you are carrying one for personal defense). So I focus first on the two big rules to establish the safety mindset right away using a toy gun as a prop. The other rules make more sense when we start talking about how to operate (or “administrate”) a gun, and can practice with the real thing.
Download Guide #1!
There are a lot of good books on shooting and safety, but I haven’t yet come across a basic diagram that looks nice and fits on a single page. This first PDF is about the two main rules of firearms safety. The layout is a little cramped, but it’s nice because a big photo reinforces the text. I think new shooters will find it informative. I’m planning on creating sheets that introduce the other rules and how to operate a pistol; if there’s anything I like more than shooting guns, it’s taking pictures of them :-)
NOTE: Please do not direct-link to the PDF file.
» Download Shooting Guide 01: Safety PDF
» Download Shooting Guide 01: Safety JPGUPDATE 2015: An updated design is available for a dollar donation!My Dad, who’s been visiting for the past couple months, commented:
At the time, we thought that by not exposing you to these kinds of things you would lose interest in them. Well, that didn’t work.
However, having gone through the process of rediscovering my childhood passion as an adult, my perspective now has made it a much more serious and reflective experience. Don’t get me wrong…it’s also just a lot of fun, but I am glad that I didn’t get a lot of stupid ideas in my head as a kid that I would now have unlearn. Being informed and experienced is the way to go, I think, no matter what your age.
- October 28, 2005
ADS: Active Defense System Anti-Shine Complex
October 28, 2005I was complaining to my sister about how my face felt like crap in the winter time, and she asked, “What kind of moisturizer do you use?”Read more“Moisturizer?” I inquired blankly. Sis scowled in exasperation.
So she got me some stuff from L’Oreal called Men’s Expert Active Defense System Oil Controller Anti-Oiliness Moisturizer Anti-Shine Complex–really, that’s what it says on the box! It was the least “girly” product she could find that was available outside of the scary department store counters with the lipstick and “creams of mysterious purpose”. Anyway, the stuff she got me “mattifies skin” and provides “non-greasy, 24H hydration”…exactly what I need, apparently.
It sat in a bag in my living room for like three months before I stumbled upon it again this afternoon. Realizing I was feeling a tad “dry”, I figured I would try it out. But I didn’t even get that far, because when I took it out of the box I was floored by the coolness of the packaging. The tube of product (shown above, dramatically backlit) matches the box art, which has lots of tiny type and a blueprint of the packaging technology. The design reminds me of cool Flash sites of the 2advanced school of design.
Now that I’ve taken a picture of it, I might as well get on with it and try out the “active defense system against oiliness”. I wonder if our boys in Iraq know about this stuff!
UPDATE: I finally used up my first tube, and had a terrible time trying to find more of it at the local stores. At first I went to the Moisturizers and Skin Care department, but this is actually targeted toward women and babies. I asked a salegirl at the third CVS I went to for some help. She gave me a quizzical look, trying to make sense of the oddity of a grown man looking for moisturizer (she must have been in her late teens if that). She couldn’t find the stuff either. My sister told me later that it might be in the Shaving Department, where all the “manly” skin care products are, and indeed that’s exactly where I found it. Whew. I also got some other stuff to try, but so far I like the ADS stuff the best. The other men’s moisturizer, from lumen-something, looks like makeup. It works, but it isn’t as fresh feeling as the L’Oreal product.
- October 27, 2005
Typing Out Loud
October 27, 2005I was just reading about a trio of grad students who, using nothing but a 10-minute audio recording of a person typing, were able to recover 96% of what was typed. Very cool. It turns out you don’t even need to have a calibration pass to match the subtle variations in sound of each key.Read moreSince there is one key for every letter, I’m guessing the students are doing a type of frequency analysis, a cipher-breaking technique dating back to the 9th century. It works like this: though at first you don’t know what key makes what sound, you do have a lot of sounds collected. For the English language, we know that certain letters are more likely to appear than others. This information is found in a “letter frequency table”, and you can make your own by counting letters in enough text. So see which letters seem to be occuring most often, and you can guess that those letters correspond to the top entries of the letter frequency table. Plug ’em in and see if it makes sense.
Also, in two- or three-letter words, we have a good chance of guessing that they’re words like THE, A, and IN. And once we have those letters matched, we have a good chance of uncovering other letters through context…if you’re good at “Wheel of Fortune”, you get the idea. Now imagine a computer doing this all for you. Scary!
BTW, there’s a cool collection of maritime posters at the American Merchant Marine at War website.
Via Freedom To Tinker…quite some time ago :-)
- October 26, 2005
Lego Serenity and Crew!
October 26, 2005Ged, knowing that I’m a Serenity fan, forwarded me Serenity Lego-ized by Chris Doyle. A lot of detail went into this. There’s even lego versions of the crew.Read more - October 26, 2005
Setting a Posting Schedule
October 26, 2005Read moreIt’s been a pretty busy few weeks. On the home front, I’ve had house guests for the past three months, and I’ve been painting the basement so I can move my studio back into it. On the work front, there’s more freelance work, networking, and all the activities related to the Printable CEO Phase II. It feels good to be busy, but this has come at the expense of daily posts on the blog.
To compensate for the reduced posting schedule, I’ve been writing longer articles, but last night I thought that I should probably balance them out with shorter ones. So I’m thinking Wednesdays will be a day of Quick Blurbs, Written Quickly. Mondays and Fridays I’ll reserve for longer researched articles that sit for a few days. We’ll see how that goes.
UPDATE: Well, that lasted for about 30 minutes :-) Decided that I’d just post a regular quick-link on Wednesday, as putting together a whole list of them took as much time as a whole regular post!