Anxeity at Shooting

bt380

New member
I was asked a question that I have no idea how to resolve and not give the typical male man up response. A husband took his wife to the shooting range to introduce her to shooting. She never made it part way thru the "this is the isle where we will shoot." She started crying from just the noise from other shooters. He was very easy with her. Her dad shoots shot guns and rifles frequently. He never took her shooting. She was a child that has no history of violence and has spent her life in schools (HS, College, Teacher of 5th graders and is about 30). Her folks are stable people. How can a 30 year old be so timid about guns? I could only come up with, go to a place in the country w/ a 22. Have her stay way back while you shoot. Maybe on the next rip, move her a bit closer. Have her help you clean the gun at home. Find an older female and let them two talk without the male about. Sort of easing up on this super slowly. I'd like to hear from women on any ideas you may have that are beyond a males typical logic.
 
How could you be so insensitive about her sensitivity? Not everyone even likes guns, can handle loud noises, or want to be involved in something they see as only for killing - especially a teacher - I know, I left corporate to become a teacher in a very pro gun state and there were still many who abhorred guns.

Want her to like guns? Get great hearing protection, shoot only .22 and do it where some butthead isn't letting lose with some 500 magnum 2 feet from her. Then go from there......

Good luck in helping out
 
Are you sure she wants to learn to shoot? Not everyone does (strange as it may seem to us), and there's no point trying to force something like that on someone.

If she does, "Go to a place in the country with a .22" is pretty good advice, IMO.

An even better idea, assuming she does want to learn, would be for her husband to take himself out of the picture as her teacher; that always sets things up for additional stress. It would be way better to have her learn from a professional in a women-only class -- ideally one with a woman instructor, but at least with someone who has experience teaching women to shoot.

It's actually not that uncommon for someone to be really stressed by the noise, especially if this was an indoor range. Even with hearing protection, it can be pretty overwhelming if you're not accustomed to it.
 
De-Horning the devil !!!

It's obviouis that the enviroment was too intimidating for her and her husband should have been sensitive enough to see it coming. The first time I experienced this was when i picked up my youngest daughter from college and it just happened that there was a Gun Show, on the way. I took her in and after about five minutes, she asked to go out and wait, in the car. Later we talked and found that even the sight of all those guns, intimidated her. .... :confused:

The last time I ran into this was at an "Outdoor's Women's" training day. There were three gun stations and I took part in the M/L station. There was one particular young women that refused to to shoot at the shotgun and rifle station. After going through our instructions, it was time to shoot. Took some time but did get her to shoot. Afterwards, she started shaking and then cried. Some of the other ladies hugged her till she felt better and stated that she was glad she had conquored that fear. I replied that in all my years of teaching, I had never had this happen and she had made my day. .... :)

Be Safe !!!
 
double up:

Don't expect this to be an end-all cure, but even as someone who enjoys shooting I find that foam earplugs AND earmuffs one top do a lot for my comfort levels when shooting.

I would imagine that atmosphere might have something do with it too. A pleasant warm sunny day in a wide open field sounds a lot better to most than a cramped dimly lit smoky indoor joint. Like going to a picnic rather than a bar. The sound of each shot seems amplified by the walls at indoor ranges.
 
The sound of each shot seems amplified by the walls at indoor ranges.
And so it is. Without getting into the fancy acoustics of it, it has to do with the way echoes interact with the original sound and with each other in a reverberant environment.

An indoor range not only seems noisier than outdoors -- it is noisier.
 
I would take a step back and start with class-room stuff at home. Take out a couple of samples and discuss firearms safety. After she is comfortable (hours? days? weeks?), move on to handling and operation. Gradually progress to dry-firing. Finally, go shooting in a quiet area with a .22lr.

But, as has been emphasized, only if she is actually interested in learning.
 
An even better idea, assuming she does want to learn, would be for her husband to take himself out of the picture as her teacher; that always sets things up for additional stress. It would be way better to have her learn from a professional in a women-only class -- ideally one with a woman instructor, but at least with someone who has experience teaching women to shoot.

Exactly right. And in addition, the fact that her father was a shooter tells you nothing about her attitude to firearms and loud noises today. Or about being taught to shoot by a male. No assumptions. Offer to arrange the training as Vanya recommended. If she says no, forget it for now.

Lots of people, and not just women, really have an aversion to the activity we value so highly.
 
I had two Blueticks from the same litter long ago...When a shot rang out, one would hide under the truck, and the other would run towards the sound as he knew that was where the 'action' was...Guess which one we allowed to breed...

Sorry if this seems callous, but...

The Woman doesn't sound as if she should be anywhere near guns, let alone have one in her hand...

If the issue is 'self protection', then maybe her husband should save them both a lot of grief and get her the highest level of non-lethal protection their area allows (ie. 'mace', bear spray, etc.)...
 
Salmoneye, the reaction described in the OP isn't that unusual, and it says nothing about whether this woman can learn to shoot, do so safely, and enjoy it, with proper instruction.

Here's just one example, which also points to some of the reasons why some women have this kind of reaction:
I've taught a few women who've been victimized....

The worst was a woman who'd been raped on her way home one night. She was trembling like a leaf, and her husband was (almost literally) dragging her in for lessons. He was doing all the talking, and she wouldn't even make eye contact.

He was very aggressive and he acted as if he was affronted somehow by the whole situation. According to him, she didn't need therapy, she needed to learn to "fight back." I ended up declining.

I've had women come in who seemed fine on the surface, then broke into tears on the range. Each time, it sends a chill up my spine. The worst part is that they almost always articulate some sense of shame that they "can't handle it," or that they'll be seen as weak. The last thing they need is someone who bullies them through it.
 
Flinching is not 'unusual' at the sound of loud noises...

Emotional breakdowns are (in my limited experience) not 'usual' in any sense of the word...

The OP very clearly spelled out that this Woman was not abused or 'victimized', so I am unsure what relevance that part of the quoted post has in this instance...The last paragraph in that post simply restates my position...

My point was that this nice Lady may simply not be capable of handling the emotional responsibility of discharging a firearm...To try and 'come up' with a way around that may not be in her (or anyone else's) best interest...

I realize we are rational, intelligent, 'nurturing' beings, that believe we can overcome any obstacle, however...As I said...I apologize if it sounds callous, but some people simply are not cut out for some things by their 'nature'...

A different setting (or teacher, or ear protection, etc.) may well change her entire attitude/dynamic, but if it doesn't, then let her set her own boundaries in what she is comfortable with...
 
I'm with a group of instructors putting on a monthly NRA Basic Handgun class. Probably 80% to 90% of our students had never touched a real gun before. Our class enrollment run 20% to 40% female. We have students of all ages from early 20s to us more seasoned types. We've had entire families attend together. Most of our student show varying levels of anxiety at handling real guns.

We try to address this by bringing them through the course material in a step-by-step, measured and supportive way.

In addition to the core lectures, we do a lot of "hands-on" work with the students. The students handle a variety of revolvers and semi-autos under direct supervision, one-on-one, of an instructor. They use dummy rounds to load and unload the guns, dry fire and generally learn how things work and feel, and they get continual safety reinforcement.

These initial hands-on exercises help students get familiar with handling gun and lay a foundation for safe gun handling habits. The students begin to realize that although guns can be dangerous they can learn how to handle them safely and that safety is in their hands.

Then in preparation for live fire, and after the "marksmanship" lecture, we work one-on-one with students on grip and stance using "blue" inert training guns.

Before going to live fire with .22s, the students shoot airsoft (the quality type) in the classroom so they can get a feel for sight alignment and trigger control (and reset) without the noise and intimidation factor (for beginners) of firing real ammunition.

After the students fire their 25 rounds of .22 (working one-on-one with an instructor), we put out a variety of guns from 9mm to .44 Magnum so the students can get the experience of firing the larger calibers. Shooting the centerfire guns is at each student's option. Most fire them all, but some choose not to.

When someone has gone through our program, it's not uncommon for her/him to be shooting 1.5 to 2.0 inch groups at seven yards with the heavy calibers. A few months ago, a petite young woman who had never fired any type of gun before out shot everyone, including her husband, with the .44 Magnum -- putting three rounds into about an inch at 7 yards.

Going through our process most students shed a good deal of their initial anxiety. Some remain anxious to a degree but still manage to master their anxiety and perform well. In the last several years only one or two (out of perhaps a couple of hundred) could not complete the class.
 
It's natural

We try to address this by bringing them through the course material in a step-by-step, measured and supportive way.
Well stated and you have to be prepared for all levels of anxiety. It's a natrual, protective reaction. .... :)

Be Safe !!!
 
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I'd be willing to bet money that this lady was not at that range of her own initiative, and that she has some kind of past experience involving guns which was traumatic to her.

Perhaps I'm a pessimist, but I'm just imagining the stereotypical scenario where some bubba decides that his "little lady" needs to know how to shoot and drags her to the range despite knowing (or perhaps being ignorant of the fact) that she's absolutely terrified of guns.
 
I saw that in basic during a dry fire exercise at Lackland back in the 60's. One guy in our flight fell apart. At first the DI went after him with a stick. When that didn't work several of them tried to talk him through the exercise. I was appalled that someone would be afraid of an empty M-16. Since then I've learned to accept how others feel about guns, male or female. I don't think this is limited to one sex or the other.
 
I dated a woman who was terrified of guns (she was also ultra-liberal, but let's not get into that). She was never around them, but felt that an unloaded gun in a safe was just waiting to shoot someone and wouldn't want to stay the night at my place unless I had unloaded and locked up the guns in my safe... and showed her that they were closed up, as if they were some kind of savage animals that needed to be safely contained.

She tried to get used to it by having me take her to the range but displayed the same irrational fear you described, cringing and wincing with every shot she heard--as if every time she heard a gun go off someone was shooting AT HER.

While I think that immersion is the best way to get people to get over phobias, there has to be a desire to get over one's fears. Why would someone who vehemently despises guns want to get over their fear of guns?

A lot of women's dislike towards guns is due to how men patronize them, the perceived complexity of guns, the noise... My wife took a gun course that was 50% female, which included a range component.

I didn't make the mistake of teaching her or forcing her to shoot, because any time you try to teach a significant other anything relationship dynamics can make things worse. She liked the course, can competently shoot a gun, thought the cops teaching it were nice, but still thinks guns are loud, dirty, eject hot brass everywhere, and will only go to a range sporadically to keep up her skill set.
 
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As said earlier some people have no interest in shooting. If she wants to learn start with a .22 one to one not on a range with lots of shooting going on. If she doesn't want to shoot then that's her decision my wife for instance has no interest in firearms i have no problem with that.
 
If she developed skill with an air gun she might get curious enough to willingly try her hand with the right .22. How many of us started with a BB gun?
 
I get the impression that a lot of situations where guys wants their wife/girlfriend etc. to go to the range it is under the headline of 'I just want you to be able to defend yourself' (not saying this is the case for OPs friend).

I could see how that premise conjures up a picture of aggression, with guns being used in violent situations and that this could be a strong deterrent to some people, female or otherwise.

If this is the case I think a better approach would be to introduce the person to the mechanics of shooting in the context of target shooting and the relaxing effect it can have.

In other words, I think that for some people the premise of 'I have to get you to the range so you know how to use a gun to shoot an aggressor before they are able to bash your head in or worse' is offputting and could create an anxiety response that is tied to the perceived situation rather than the guns themselves. If the premise is "Target shooting is very relaxing, why don't you come to the range and try it out" it could create a more inviting context and once the person is used to guns they could 'graduate' to self defense oriented exercises.

That and yes, do not start out with a 30-06 or an AR-10 as the first gun for them to shoot.
 
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