With more and more states (fourteen, per Wikipedia â not counting Puerto Rico) giving the green light to some form of âConstitutional Carryâ â that is, carrying a legal concealed firearm without a state-issued permit â citizens have been heading to gun shops and training facilities in droves to enable themselves to exercise their right to defend themselves. Â Compact, concealable handguns are flying off the shelves, handgun training courses are filling up as people want to refine their skills and learn laws.
People putting their freedoms to use is a wonderful thing.
However, many of these people are complete newbies to the wide world of concealed carry â some of them have never fired a gun before.
Itâs an interesting mish-mash of emotions carrying a firearm that nobody else knows you have â elation, invincibility, nobility, trepidation, sometimes outright fear.
Itâs something you have to experience yourself before you can fully understand. Â Some of that fear comes from the fact that this new-fangled power is manifesting itself via a whole new experience for a gun owner: What the hell is the best way to do this?
Iâve been carrying concealed handguns for 18 years.
I donât consider myself a newbie at concealed carry anymore, but I certainly havenât done it all and i donât consider myself an âexpertâ. Â Â Rather, Iâve found a couple methods of carry that work for me, and I rarely stray from them. Â But the purpose of this article isnât to debate gear, technique, or methodology â Iâd just like to tell people who are just starting out in concealed carry a few things that I wish Iâd known when starting out.
There are probably millions of articles out there that will help you find the best carry pistol or holster or ammo; Iâd just like to share what Iâve learned from my 18 years of carrying a hidden gun.
Letâs get started with the most important one to accept.
1. Itâs Not Easy & It Sucks
Once you get over the rush and sheer amazement that youâre carrying a concealed handgun, reality sets in. Â Itâs uncomfortable.
Itâs a hassle. Â Youâre constantly paranoid that your gun is printing and some kid will point at you and scream, âMOMMY! HE HAS A GUN!â.
Spare ammo is never easy to carry unless itâs on a belt-mounted pouch that prints worse than the holstered gun. That super expensive hybrid leather/kydex rig that everyone online raved about? Â It doesnât fit your body type and pinches and chafes. Â So does the one you bought to replace it.
Handgun grip panels rub, wear through, and catch on clothing, not to mention that custom grip stippling job you HAD to have will treat your love handle like a cheese grater.
You bend over and oops, your shirt hikes up and thereâs your gun for everyone to see.
You sit down and the handgun goes âTHUNKâ against the seat and people look at you funny.
Your ankle holster slips and rotates around your leg and allows dirt and crud into your gun.
Your guns get rusty from being close to your sweaty body.
You have to dress appropriately to cover the gun â no tight fitting T-shirts! Â You have to stop at the post office? Gotta take the gun off.
You go to your favorite burger place and notice that they just posted âno guns allowedâ? Â Gotta walk back to the car and secure the pistol, or find a new place to eat (recommended). Â Picking your kid up from school? Â Oops, guns are a huge No-No there, gotta leave the gun at home.
If your holster doesnât clip or snap on, you have to take your belt off, pull the gun off the belt, and run your belt back through the loops.
Carrying concealed is a thousand tiny hassles that conglomerate into one big pain in the ass.
Luckily, time and experience (and a lot of money) will help you work through the gear and body location issues, making you more comfortable â but itâs something that can only be worked out over an extended period of time carrying. Â But have no fear: once you have everything worked out, it still sucks. Â Anyone who says differently is probably lying or selling something.
2. Stop Fidgeting & Carry On
You have a gun on, and like we just discovered in the previous paragraphs, itâs uncomfortable and not in the right spot. Â (Even just a quarter inch difference in placement can make a huge difference in comfort. Â No, really.) Â You keep trying to adjust, or maybe youâre nervous about the gun printing, so you constantly screw with the gun and holster and attempt adjustments while youâre in public.
Hereâs a tip from your buddy  Drew: KNOCK IT OFF.  Run-of-the-mill people arenât geared to analyze bumps and lumps sticking out of peopleâs shirts.
Iâve walked around wearing full-sized pistols obviously printing under sweatshirts, but nobody stole a second glance.
If youâre worried someone will see it, dress differently.
If itâs uncomfortable, deal with it, or go into a restroom where you have privacy, and re-adjust your rig until you are comfortable. Â By fiddling with your gun nobody can see, theyâre seeing you act suspicious with something hidden under your shirt â and THAT will raise alarms.
3. Get a Good Holster
When looking for gear, itâs all about what you like. Â This is a very personal matter; no one holster fits everyoneâs body.
We donât need to debate inside the waistband carry vs. outside the waistband, or 4 oâclock carry vs. appendix carry, Â leather vs. kydex, blah blah blah.
The only requirement I personally would recommend is that the holster completely covers the triggerguard, for safety. Â Go to a good, high-end local shop (avoid the big box stores â chances are excellent anyone there wonât know a good holster from a New Balance sneaker) and ask to try different holsters.
Bring your pistol with you, unloaded, in a locked carrying box.
Ask to try the different holsters out with your pistol. Â Take your time, figure out what you like. Â Then spend the money and donât look back.
A good holster is worth its weight in gold, and you two will become best friendsâŠso donât go cheap.
Expect to spend $60-100 on a good rig â and donât buy cheap âuniversalâ holsters, dammit. Â Theyâre awful. Â So are SERPA holsters. Â There, I said it.
4. Get a Good Belt
In my eyes and experience, a good belt is just as, if not maybe a bit more, important than your holster.
You need a dedicated gunbelt. Â They are thicker, wider, and reinforced to hold the holster and its precious cargo close in to your body and not let it shift around. Â And when you do draw, the belt ensures the holster stays fixed with your body, and not going for a joyride with the pistol.
I used to pay no mind to my belt and just used cheapo Wal-Mart belts â until one day, I was practicing drawing from concealment and the belt actually broke (more like ripped) out of the buckle, and I presented a holstered gun with a trailing broken belt to the target. Oops.
The belt is the heart and soul of your concealed carry setup, so get a damned good one.
I know I said that I wouldnât debate gear, but the new Magpul Tejas âEl Originalâ gun belt is unbelievably comfortable and rugged â and itâs a classic design; I wear mine every day in a business casual work environment.
If youâre looking for a place to start, you canât get any better than the Magpul offering.
A good belt will run you another $60-100 or so.
5. The Gun You Have When You Need It Is The Gun You Have
This one probably needs to be explained, but itâs a simple concept: if you KNEW you were going to be in a gunfight today and you couldnât bring a long gun, what handgun would you want with you? Â Exactly â the biggest, baddest lead-slinger on the block that you knew you could shoot effectively, had a large magazine capacity in an effective caliber, with excellent sights, probably a weapon-mounted light, and spare mags, right? Â Right. Â Well, part of the concealed carrying mindset is that you have to know that there is always a possibility you will get in a gunfight today. Â To this end, I am positively baffled when people tell me they carry a small .22 derringer or a tiny single-stack .380 as their everyday carry (EDC) gun.
Now, I fully understand the limits and the inherent Catch-22 of concealed carry â the smaller the gun, the easier it is to carry.
The easier the gun is to carry, the more likely it is that youâll have it on your person.
The gun you have on your person is the one youâll be defending  your life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness with.
Yes, full-sized guns are a pain to carry and conceal, especially in hot summer months â but newer subcompact variants of full-sized pistols are still effective, and can usually use the magazines, holsters, etc., from their bigger brothers.
Just remember that the the threat of multiple badguys who are also armed is always likely, and plan accordingly.
Itâs only your life weâre talking about here, after all.
6. Carry Spare Ammunition
This is another convenience issue: itâs always a pain to carry spare ammo.
Belt-mounted mag pouches invariably show through clothing, usually worse than a smallish pistol in a good holster.
Having a spare magazine or speedloader in your pocket is annoying too, as they flop and move around and they are never in the orientation you need/want them in. Â But if youâre ever, God forbid, in a situation where you need to deploy that firearm you carry, Iâm guessing you could never have enough ammunition.
If your gun runs dry and your opponent(s) is/are still shooting, youâd better hope your life insurance plan is paid up and you told your wife you loved her when you left.
To make things easier, you can carry filler items in your pocket to keep your magazine oriented properly, or try something like the Raven Concealment ModuLoader Pocket Shield, a neat rig you can mount mag pouches to and put the whole works in your pocket.
It stops magazine printing and keeps the magazine wight where you need it. Â Or, you can always run a belt-mounted mag pouch and dress to conceal. Â Just have spare ammo with you.
Also, know how your ammunition performs. Full metal jacket ammunition will likely over penetrate and can hit bystanders.
Carry suitable defense ammunition, and no hand-loaded ammunition.
You donât need that round you carefully crafted for accuracy, power, and reliability to be misconstrued as a âdeadly mankillerâ.
7. Know When To Hold Them
Just because you have the pistol on your person, there is no rule that says you HAVE to use it.
The very best way to avoid being shot is to not get into gunfights.
Your brain is a much more powerful weapon than any gun you can carry; if you see or are in a situation developing with escalating threat, get the hell out and call the police.
There is zero shame in leaving when things get ugly.
As a matter of fact, in many locales â including my home state of Maine â you have a duty to deescalate and/or leave if you can, and lethal force is only given the blessing if you did everything you possibly could to disengage a threat and evacuate.
If you flipped the bird to the biker gang that cut you off and as a consequence, a fight develops to the point where you had to use a firearm to save your life, you can expect to spend a healthy chunk of that life behind bars. Â Take a deep breath, walk away. Â Be smart enough to keep yourself out of situations and places where you are forced to use your firearm.
Itâs common sense: pride and braggadocio will get you or others killed, while having a head on your shoulders will keep you out of trouble.
8. Carry a Less Than Lethal Deterrent
Not every defense situation calls for the nuclear option.
Giving a belligerent drunk or an aggressive dog a heady blast of pepper spray in the kisser and walking away is a lot easier on your lifestyle than trying to explain to the judge why you had to empty the magazine into some familyâs pet Labrador that got loose and jumped at you aggressively. Â Also, if you attempt less-than-lethal deterrents and they donât stop the threat, requiring you to then have to default to the concealed gun, a jury will definitely see that you tried other options before having to use lethal force as a last resort.
If youâre already carrying more gear on your belt than Batman, a Kubaton or OC pepper spray isnât going to be an issue.
As an added bonus, it is generally not illegal to carry pepper spray or similar non-lethal deterrents in areas where you canât carry firearms. Â So if you have to take the pistol off to go into a movie theater thatâs posted as âno firearmsâ, you can still have a measure of protection on your person.
9. Nobody Should Know You have a Firearm Until Itâs Time To Start Shooting
I agree with the political fundamentals and theory behind open carrying a gun; that is, having the gun exposed for everyone to see. Many people open carry because they CAN, dammit, and thatâs fine with me.
However, all I can think of when I see someone open carrying is, âwell, thereâs the first targetâ.
If nobody knows you have a concealed firearm, you have a definite and absolute tactical advantage you can press if needed.
In my opinion, if anyone knows you have a gun, it should only be because you have cleared leather to engage a target, and that trigger is getting pulled because you perceive your life or othersâ lives to be in danger from your target.
If youâre in a heated argument or other ugly situation, and you think âbrandishingâ (showing off) the gun will be a deterrent to further crime, well, you just gave up every advantage you had.
Youâd better re-read that âknow when to hold âem, know when to fold âemâ paragraph again.
10. Know The Legal System
Unless you just used a firearm in a righteous self defense shooting right in front of four honest cops, a judge, and The Pope and they all collaborate your story, you will likely be treated like a criminal at the outset.
Once first responders show up, you will be quickly and probably roughly disarmed and handcuffed. Â Remember, law enforcement officers donât know what happened here â they are responding to a person shooting another person.
You can help your cause by having the handgun holstered and unloaded (if the threat is perceived to be gone) and your hands in the air when law enforcement shows up; you donât want responding officers to see you with a gun standing over a body. Â Saying something along the lines of âI was afraid for my life and I used my firearm in self defense.
I would like my lawyerâ and then saying nothing more until a lawyer shows up is probably a good idea (though Iâm not a lawyer and I do not profess to be; talk to a lawyer, KNOW YOUR LAWS before you even strap on that holster.
They will differ!) Â You will likely be a mental and physical basketcase, and will need time to sort out in your own head and cope with what happened before you give statements (with a lawyer present). Â Remember: every American is guaranteed the right of due process before a sentence is handed down â and you just were a judge, jury, and possibly an executioner in one fell swoop.
You will likely be arrested, you will likely go to jail, you most certainly will stand trial where you will have to prove your innocence and your story. Â And if a judge deems your situation a righteous shooting in a criminal trial and dismisses the case, just remember that you will probably have to face a civil trial, especially if your assailant had a family.
You have an excellent chance to possibly lose that civil trial.
Yes, you just defended your life or the lives of others, but you still could be found guilty of manslaughter or murder down the road because you had to deny someone their life, limbs, happiness to save your own.
This is the way it is; and itâs definitely an unsavory reality of carrying a concealed firearm. Â Not everything is black and white, cut and dried, Cowboys and Indians.
You will be alive, but you may lose everything to save your life.
There are many great articles online about what happens after you have to use a firearm in self defense.
This one is excellent, and I would definitely read this article by the US Concealed Carry Association.
I would consider these articles to be essential prerequisites to carrying concealed.
Wrapping It Up
One of the best parts about carrying concealed is that in terms of technique, gear, and mindset, you only improve with experience.
You try things that work, ditch things that donât.
Itâs a very personal experience, and most of it can only be learned by jumping in with both feet and giving it a go.
However, the tips listed above are definitely things that Iâve learned along the way that I wish Iâd known when I started carrying a concealed handgun.
So if youâve been debating carrying a concealed firearm to defend yourself, try it out â just be sure to take training courses â not just in firearms handling and safety, but in law.
Know the consequences of using your firearm. Research, research, research, then go wear out holsters and figure out what works best for you.
I sincerely hope that none of us ever have to use a firearm in self defense, but if you do, I hope that your preparation, knowledge, and mindset will keep you from being a victim â before and after drawing that concealed gun.
Did I miss anything? Â Do you have anything to add to the list? Â Sound off in the comments below!
Source : http://survivalcache.com/10-tips-everyone-should-know-before-carrying-concealed-ccw-weapons-pistol/