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Negative. You do not understand the power of the mind. The brain...at least my brain...absolutely knows when the gun is going to go bang and it knows when the gun is not loaded and there will be no bang. And it behaves differently under each scenario.Walk around the house with the unloaded gun. Point gun at various objects around the house maintaining sights on object, pull trigger, sights should be in exact same spot on object before the trigger was pulled.
Once that is done a few hundred times, flinching should be non-issue. Recoil will always be there, but the recoil occurs after the shot has already been taken, after the trigger has been pulled.
Negative. You do not understand the power of the mind. The brain...at least my brain...absolutely knows when the gun is going to go bang and it knows when the gun is not loaded and there will be no bang. And it behaves differently under each scenario.
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Negative. You do not understand the power of the mind. The brain...at least my brain...absolutely knows when the gun is going to go bang and it knows when the gun is not loaded and there will be no bang. And it behaves differently under each scenario.
I have thousands of rounds of dry fire practice under my belt. I can do it perfectly time and time again. But load the gun and my brain still wants to anticipate the recoil. Dry fire helps but it is FAR from a miracle cure. And it's certainly not as simple as a few hundred rounds.
a suppressor helps
Loading a magazine with live and dummy rounds does the same thing if you dont have a revolver
Negative. You do not understand the power of the mind. The brain...at least my brain...absolutely knows when the gun is going to go bang and it knows when the gun is not loaded and there will be no bang. And it behaves differently under each scenario.
I have thousands of rounds of dry fire practice under my belt. I can do it perfectly time and time again. But load the gun and my brain still wants to anticipate the recoil. Dry fire helps but it is FAR from a miracle cure. And it's certainly not as simple as a few hundred rounds.
Revolvers are good for this, at least for me. What I like to do is load up the cylinder, fire a shot. Spin the cylinder. Fire a shot/or hit a previously fired case. Spin the cylinder. Repeat until all the cartridges go bang. You gradually go from most likely hitting a live round to most likely not hitting a live round, and of course, every flinch on a spent cartridge is clearly visible. When I find myself flinching, I like to go through a cylinder or two in this manner to get back under control.