Gary Juhl's Close Quarter Handgun Class
Since I was in Florida for work, I extended my stay by a day to take a class with Gary Juhl. One of the supporters here in this community has taken Gary's classes and connected me with him. I can see why he likes them. I really enjoyed the class (although it was not without an unfortuante incident, but more on that later) and plan to take more when my travels take me to Florida.
This particular class focused on getting really up close and personal both from the standpoint of shooting and of weapon retention. That is somewhat new to me. I am a decent general purpose martial artist (although probably not of the same caliber as Gary is), and aside from the regular open hand stuff, have some general competency with blunt and bladed weapons. For background, I have been practicing fairly continuously since I was a pre-teen in a variety of disciplines spanning judo, sambo, kung-fu, muay thai, kali and a few other things. Muay thai is definitely my core skill and everything else has been built around that. However, figuring out how a handgun fits into the whole "arm's reach" distance equation is not something I have any serious experience with. Gary's class was immensely helpful with that. I learned quite a few new things about the use of a handgun, re-affirmed how any bladed weapon changes the close quarter equation, and adjusted my thinking on the subject a good bit.
That last part is really important and is a very underrated part of training. Mindset is key. I'd rather face a highly trained opponent who can't make up his mind than a mildly technical, but highly determined one.
If you are interested, I'll be happy to go over my takeaways from the class in a livecast this week. I am thinking about doing one on Wednesday evening. Thursday, I'll be going out of town again.
Now, the class, unfortunately, was not without incident. One of the students got his support hand in front of the handgun and put a bullet through his forearm. Thankfully, he did not hit any bones and, likely, did not seem to hit anything important since he has pretty full finger articulation.
It is an unfortunate thing to happen in a training class, but looking back on it, I can't think of anything that could be easily done to prevent that. That's the risk we all take when training with firearms. It does really re-enforce the importance of being always aware of what your various appendages are doing.
It turns out that Gary also teaches survival and trauma medicine classes and he was able to administer first aid quite professionally. That is definitely a class I need to take. I am woefully inadequate with that aspect of training.