Someday, I will write this dedication:
Thank you to all my ex's for all the excellent ideas.
And it would be in a story about all sorts of terrible mutilations and stabbings and particularly horrific deaths.
Wouldn't that scare the hell out of everyone??
Showing posts with label pistols. Show all posts
Showing posts with label pistols. Show all posts
Saturday, May 15, 2010
Wednesday, April 15, 2009
Hands on Research
By training and preference, I love research through the writer's traditional resources - print, photographs, online ready-reference.
This week, though, I got down and dirty with first hand experience. There are some things a girl just can not learn through other people's words.
Like how to shoot a firearm.
My good friend, a former Marine, graciously took me to a pistol range on Monday. There he patiently explained the handling of the four different pistols I ended up renting and shooting.
I learned what single action and double action meant, what the hammer did, how to hold the weapon, how to aim it, and finally, how to shoot it.
First came a revolver, the .38 Special. Next came two 9mm, a Sig and a Glock. Lastly, .45 Smith and Wesson.
Whenever I learn something new, the oddest things stick out at me. I didn't expect to be tossed around as much as I was. I'm not small, nor am I weak. But my thumbs and wrist still feel like they've been gnawed on!
Second, I was struck by the difference between the slow, accurate firing of the revolver and the faster, "throw a lot of bullets at it" feeling of the semi-automatics.
Handling something that has the sole purpose of killing something is an interesting mixture of fear and power. It's not unlike getting behind the wheel of a car, but with a less ambiguous reasoning. After all, a car is also transportation.
Will I ever own one? Unlikely.
Will I fire them again? Most likely.
Will I try other firearms, such as rifles? Again, most likely.
This is information I need to make my writing vigorous, strong, and real. Lots of times, writers put in characters who are not affected by their ability to kill, who almost seem to seek it out.
I've already learned this is not truthful. Those who understand the kind of power and responsibility that come with holding life and death in their hands are more likely to never want to use it.
This week, though, I got down and dirty with first hand experience. There are some things a girl just can not learn through other people's words.
Like how to shoot a firearm.
My good friend, a former Marine, graciously took me to a pistol range on Monday. There he patiently explained the handling of the four different pistols I ended up renting and shooting.
I learned what single action and double action meant, what the hammer did, how to hold the weapon, how to aim it, and finally, how to shoot it.
First came a revolver, the .38 Special. Next came two 9mm, a Sig and a Glock. Lastly, .45 Smith and Wesson.
Whenever I learn something new, the oddest things stick out at me. I didn't expect to be tossed around as much as I was. I'm not small, nor am I weak. But my thumbs and wrist still feel like they've been gnawed on!
Second, I was struck by the difference between the slow, accurate firing of the revolver and the faster, "throw a lot of bullets at it" feeling of the semi-automatics.
Handling something that has the sole purpose of killing something is an interesting mixture of fear and power. It's not unlike getting behind the wheel of a car, but with a less ambiguous reasoning. After all, a car is also transportation.
Will I ever own one? Unlikely.
Will I fire them again? Most likely.
Will I try other firearms, such as rifles? Again, most likely.
This is information I need to make my writing vigorous, strong, and real. Lots of times, writers put in characters who are not affected by their ability to kill, who almost seem to seek it out.
I've already learned this is not truthful. Those who understand the kind of power and responsibility that come with holding life and death in their hands are more likely to never want to use it.
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