I've posted here in my five years active about the potential for CAR to be a better, or at least, a tool in one's box of muscle memories and skills, comparable to Weaver grip, Isoloces Stance while using pistols, and generally universal marksmanship and self-defense pertinent disciplines with rifles, shotguns and, chiefly, given CAR's inherent use for making handguns easier to retain and use safely in close quarters and tight spaces that self defense, as a concept, can be made harder with inherently if one isn't well off to handle the recoil or stress of fight-or-flight instincts in such situations well enough to not, at best, limp wrist in a bad mistake on their part with a gun otherwise reliably recoil-driven and semi-auto, or, at worst, lose their life or limb, so to speak, in failing to defend themselves sufficiently from harm coming to them at the worst of a SD situation.
Given CAR is, at best, rare to find formal instructors on since its creator passed away, and, worse, hard to find true-to-the-original training that its creator gave its first students from his instruction firsthand for them, I worry my want to have CAR, among more basic firearm disciplines, in my metaphorical toolbox one day, that, much like an endangered languages, CAR may not survive until my 21st birthday in three years for me to be taught by anyone not immortalized in their teachings of it on the Internet or on paper.
Anyone know enough about this sort of thing to point me in the right direction to collect information for going down the road of becoming, well and truly, a member of the gun enthusiast/owners' community online, in real life, and in my knowledge base and passion for all things firearm and self defense oriented at this stage in life, lest CAR never be ubiquitous enough that I might one day be able to learn it and pass it down much like a dying language?
Cheers.
Given CAR is, at best, rare to find formal instructors on since its creator passed away, and, worse, hard to find true-to-the-original training that its creator gave its first students from his instruction firsthand for them, I worry my want to have CAR, among more basic firearm disciplines, in my metaphorical toolbox one day, that, much like an endangered languages, CAR may not survive until my 21st birthday in three years for me to be taught by anyone not immortalized in their teachings of it on the Internet or on paper.
Anyone know enough about this sort of thing to point me in the right direction to collect information for going down the road of becoming, well and truly, a member of the gun enthusiast/owners' community online, in real life, and in my knowledge base and passion for all things firearm and self defense oriented at this stage in life, lest CAR never be ubiquitous enough that I might one day be able to learn it and pass it down much like a dying language?
Cheers.