Tuesday, June 8, 2010

Shootin' Buddy Conundrum...

I've made no secret of my desire to take my son shooting this year. He's nine years old, has had a BB gun for two years now (and no, he has not put his eye nor the eyes of his sister out with it), and has expressed interest in going to the range with daddy. Mrs. G. remains skeptical, pointing out rightly that he still has trouble with basic directions from time to time, that he has the typical attention span of a nine year old boy (SQUIRREL!), and that it is a big responsibility to hand a firearm to a young boy. I firmly believe that he is ready, certainly for the single shot Ithaca Arms M-49 I've got picked out as his first firearm (Note to self: Clean & oil the M-49...) and under my supervision.

But TheBoy threw me for a loop last night. As I was tucking him in, he told me that he wanted to come to the range with me sometime this summer. He's expressed interest before, so it's not a complete suprise, but most of the time he's expressed interest it's been as I am heading out the door to the range. Up until last night, I'd chalked it up to him wanting to spend time with his dad (*beams*), but last night came pretty well out of the blue. Sounds like it's time...

And then he threw me for a loop.
"I don't want to shoot anything that could kill someone".
How do you respond to that? I've tried to get the point across that it's not the weapon that should be feared, but the bad people that misuse such weapons. I've tried to make them understand that pretty much anything can function as a weapon (and believe me, they take this to the ridiculous extreme when they get going - "Broccoli! That can be a weapon - it's awful taste will kill you!" [dissolve into giggles]). I explained that yes, even the single-shot rifle I was going to start him out on could potentially kill someone, but that it would be very difficult under normal circumstances and practically impossible when he and I go together.

I had him recite the Four Rules (which he nailed) and showed him, using a Nerf™ gun, how I would help him shoot the rifle. I showed him how we would hold the rifle together; how I would only let it point downrange (I had him try to move his Nerf™ gun more than a few degrees in either direction); I even explained in simple terms how the gun was a single-shot - that we had to manually load the bullet into the chamber and then pull the trigger to get it to fire, after which we would have to load in another bullet.

I think what I'm going to do is bring his rife with us when we go to the range for him to observe only. I'll shoot .22LR only, and let him get used to the sound of gunfire (double-plugged, of course) and see what actually happens at the range. I'll put a few rounds through his rifle, so he can see how it operates and how to hold it, and offer to let him hold it unloaded. If he expresses any further interest at that point we can continue; otherwise we'll save that for the next trip. Or the trip after that. The last thing I want to do is force this on him; I want him to genuinely want to come shooting with dad to have fun.

But that really threw me off my game for a second - "I don't want to shoot something that could kill someone". I don't know if he heard something on the playground at school, or if there was some sort of "safety" lecture, or if there are other factors at work I don't know about. This is Massachusetts, after all; we shut down schools for a single .22LR casing found on the premises, so it's quite possible that students have been told how terribly icky and dangerous guns are. On the other hand, deer season still claims a good number of high school students in the fall, and there's more than a couple NRA, GOAL, and Gadsden stickers on the backs of pickup trucks.

We'll see - I'm certain he'll have a blast (pun intended) and want to come with me all the time.

That is all.

10 comments:

Unknown said...

"Does that mean you're not going to ask for driving lessons when you're fifteen? I'm sure glad i won't ever have to worry about you wanting your own car, or borrowing mine."

;)

Scott McCray said...

Goodonya - In my opinion (worth exactly what yer payin') you are going about it the right way. I'd be suspicious of some nanny-statism from school going on - but folks like you are the biggest part of why we win.

ZerCool said...

While I don't have my own to have tested the theory on, I'm betting he's smart (and mature/old) enough to understand a direct answer:

"That gun will never ever kill anyone ALL BY ITSELF. It has to be used in the wrong way by a Bad Person."

(An ex-girlfriend of mine had kids; I introduced her 10-year-old son to a single-shot .22/.410 after he'd tried my .22 semi once and he took to it like a fish to water... so I'm really kinda lost on "I don't want to"!)

A Horse Thief said...

I've heard virtually the same thing from one of my shooting buddies. He has a 13 year old daughter who went with her dad and my family for her first time shooting. She couldn't get enough.

His 10 year old son, on the other hand, is just not ready. He's not mature enough to slow down and think about what holding a gun would mean. My 6 year old son was ready when he was 5, but I put him off for a year mostly to convince myself.

It's different for every kid, for everything. Of course, you're a dad. You already knew that.

Lissa said...

Eeeeenteresting.

I think it shows your son's growing maturity, that he can conceive of using a gun -- not a toy -- and knowing that such a thing could effect someone's death. I think your plan to go slowly sounds good. I think I'd trust your son a lot more, having said that, than if he picked up the Nerf gun and chanted "BANG BANG! You're dead!"

jimbob86 said...

"How do you respond to that?"

I'd go with:

"Guess you'll have to stop using that BB gun, then. ANY gun, like any tool, can be misused to cause "(educational filmstrip voice)death or serious bodily injury"..... but I believe you are responsible enough to not do that."

Anonymous said...

Back in the never never (30+ years ago) I ran rifle ranges for the Boy Scouts. At the local camps we used single shot Remington and Mossberg bolt actions in .22 lr and at Philmont we had Remington 700's in 30-06. At the local camps we opened the range during free time and we were always second in popularity to the swimming pool (Texas is HOT in the summer). Kids love to shoot, but strict supervision is the rule of the day. Historically, the swimming area at scout camps has always been far more dangerous than the rifle range.

Bob S. said...

Jay,

Others have said it but I'll add an idea.

"I don't want to shoot anything that could kill someone".

Put an empty firearm in front of him and ask him what it would take for that firearm to kill someone.

The answer is someone has to pick it up, load it, aim it, pull the trigger.

It is the person that makes the difference, not the firearm.

Ask how many times you've been to the range or shot firearms and how many times someone has been hurt by those firearms.

How many times has he ridden on your motorcycle?


Emphasis over and over again that the responsibility not to harm is his -- and that you trust him to exercise it.

He has already shown that responsibility with his BB gun, right?

Lokidude said...

Another possibility: maybe "kill someone" is a recoil threshold. As in "If it's big enough to kill, shooting it is going to hurt." Youtube vidiots make shooting look damn painful sometimes. I can see how that would scare a boy.

wv: wessin. Along with Smith, one of the smartest men ever.

Sevesteen said...

When I got my supplies to do holsters, my 5 year old nephew asked about what I was doing, and got more and more concerned

"For guns? Real guns? People shouldn't have real guns. Do you have real guns? Do you shoot people with them?"

My brother at least is a fairly hard-core libertarian--not particularly into guns, but certainly not an anti. He assumed that our Mom, who babysat frequently was indoctrinating his kids. I'm not so sure, I think there's plenty of media stuff that kids can pick up.