Molon_labe wrote:Hey Skiprr..how long does it take for your adrenaline to kick in when you get woken up in the middle of the night by the dreaded "bump in the dark"?
I'm not advocating your firearm be unloaded and locked in the closet in the safe. Just not in immediate reach of your sleeping position as you lie in bed. You don't want your cell phone ringing in the middle of the night and you lunge for your Samsung phone only to find yourself holding your SIG. Involuntary things happen when we're asleep. Farnam tells a story of man who was awakend by the sound of a gunshot. He came instantly awake, sat bolt upright in the bed, had his firearm in hand, and was scanning urgently for threats. Then he noticed some smoke wafting from the barrel of his gun, and a bullet entry hole in an interior wall of the bedroom.
The point is, in your home, and especially if others live with you, you don't want a gun in your hand involuntarily or within tenths of a second of your eyelids snapping open from being jarred awake. It's too easy to act before you cognitively decide to act.
The VCA smashing the plate-glass window will have to clear some glass before he steps through, then he'll have to (observe, orient) figure out the lay of the land before he proceeds through the dark to your bedroom. The idea is that the extra second it takes you to get out of bed won't significantly compromise a defense, but it will help prevent you from launching rounds where you don't want them to go.
To keep it from seeming as if this is a thread hijack

Closer to me on the nightstand than my home defense pistol is a flashlight. A little bigger than one I'd carry, this one is a 120-lumen xenon-bulb job. More than adequate to temporarily blind an attacker to mess up his night vision, and a force-multiplier in that regard. I've shot with an LED flashlight in strobe mode, and that's just too cool. I haven't seen one yet that will strobe with as bright a beam as I'd like, but one may already exist...if not, they'll no doubt be coming soon.
Point is, at home and at night, I think a tactical flashlight should be married to whatever defensive firearm I'm using. On a 12-gauge, even an autoloader, I think the light needs to be attached. On a pistol, I'm more comfortable with a separate light in my off-hand.