Re: What brought you to getting your CHL/LTC
Posted: Sat Feb 20, 2016 4:26 pm
I (and some relatives I hung out with) always wanted to learn martial arts (self defense) from a very young age. Thank you Billy Jack, the Kung Fu TV show, and Bruce Lee. But living in a rural area there wasn't much opportunity to learn from qualified instructors. We made due trying to teach ourselves and using hay bails for kicking practice. In my, though, 20s a Tae Kwon Do/Hapkido instructor opened a local school. I signed up and hung with it long enough to get my red belt in TKD. College got in the way of my getting the black belt...which was OK because I thought I'd gone as far as I could in TKD, anyway. I would've much rather learned the Hapkido (basically, TKD kicking with Akido-like grappling). He taught very little Hapkido. Today, you can't fling a cat in a strip mall without hitting a TKD school.
After college I drifted into Jeet Kune Do and Filipino Arnis (with other arts added into that mix). I studied from a police officer who is now retired and travels the world teaching martial arts. I was training from him multiple times per week, which meant driving 100 miles round trip. But now.... I was getting somewhere and learning what I really wanted to learn, not just the TKD sport stuff. (Although that was fun, too.) I met a lot of interesting people during that JKD/FA time. Including undercover DEA agents who came to my instructor's seminars. One in particular who I only trained with one day. Neat man. A lot of my martial arts friends really knew their handguns. I didn't own one. Being rural, rifles and shotguns were simply a tool for hunting, killing varmints, and having by the bed just in case somebody attempted to break in during the night. I rationalized that since I was rural I really didn't have a need for a handgun. Plus, I kept a rifle in the pickup, anyway. Besides, this was during the 90's and the CHL program hadn't been passed yet. Or had only just passed towards the end of my MA training.
Then....I had meth cookers move in across the road from me and for whatever reason they thought I needed to be a part of their rural life. That's when I bought the Glock 19 to keep on me while at home. It just so happened, however, right after buying the handgun a CHL instructor was going to be teaching a class locally...so I signed up. I really didn't give it much thought...it was more like, "What the heck. Why not?
The handgun is simply an extension (albeit a very effective one) of my self defense training that I add to my empty hand and Filipino knife fighting. It's still just a tool that I use as much for shooting skunks as carrying for self defense. Carrying a firearm is a normal for me as carrying a cell phone.
It is kind of fun, though, to carry around my brothers and friends who don't have their LTCs. Sort of like being 16 again and being the only one with a drivers license.
After college I drifted into Jeet Kune Do and Filipino Arnis (with other arts added into that mix). I studied from a police officer who is now retired and travels the world teaching martial arts. I was training from him multiple times per week, which meant driving 100 miles round trip. But now.... I was getting somewhere and learning what I really wanted to learn, not just the TKD sport stuff. (Although that was fun, too.) I met a lot of interesting people during that JKD/FA time. Including undercover DEA agents who came to my instructor's seminars. One in particular who I only trained with one day. Neat man. A lot of my martial arts friends really knew their handguns. I didn't own one. Being rural, rifles and shotguns were simply a tool for hunting, killing varmints, and having by the bed just in case somebody attempted to break in during the night. I rationalized that since I was rural I really didn't have a need for a handgun. Plus, I kept a rifle in the pickup, anyway. Besides, this was during the 90's and the CHL program hadn't been passed yet. Or had only just passed towards the end of my MA training.
Then....I had meth cookers move in across the road from me and for whatever reason they thought I needed to be a part of their rural life. That's when I bought the Glock 19 to keep on me while at home. It just so happened, however, right after buying the handgun a CHL instructor was going to be teaching a class locally...so I signed up. I really didn't give it much thought...it was more like, "What the heck. Why not?
The handgun is simply an extension (albeit a very effective one) of my self defense training that I add to my empty hand and Filipino knife fighting. It's still just a tool that I use as much for shooting skunks as carrying for self defense. Carrying a firearm is a normal for me as carrying a cell phone.
It is kind of fun, though, to carry around my brothers and friends who don't have their LTCs. Sort of like being 16 again and being the only one with a drivers license.