I always thought it was draw, aim, and squeeze, but apparently I missed this day of class.
Don't get me wrong, I understand that sometimes one may be forced to depend on hand-to-hand in a confrontation, but isn't it galling that usually it is someone on the firearms side of the question brings that up the synergy? Like PeteG over on the Pennsylvania Firearm Owners Association forum with "Unarmed Self-Defense As Adjunct To Pistolcraft" I've never seen a dojo present "Personal Firearms: When hands aren't enough", have you?
Of course, as is often said on gun blogs, if it gets to the point of drawing a firearm or physical contact, we have most likely failed to implement the first and most important aspect of self-defense, observation and awareness of our environment.
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