Handgun Practice

What causes a man to miss a little to the left?

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>What causes a man to miss a little to the left?
Are you a bit curved? Same here. Makes those late night piss sessions a bit of a gamble sometimes.

Incorrect grip, pulling or pushing trigger to left with finger, fast firing with incorrect stance

>What causes a man to miss a little to the left?
A tendency for glancing at men's crotches, a light footstep, or a disinterest in female attention could all be the cause user. Tell us more.

homosexuality

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Have a nonmeme answer.
You are probably holding your gun a little loose. When you fire you are tightening your whole grip which cants your gun to the left.

I was consistently to the left until I really started focusing on the “follow through” and the trigger pull in it’s completion. Work with a snap cap randomly placed in your mag at the range to get some insight on how you are really pulling the trigger and you might even find a good flinch in there I reckon

look on u Tube dufoos

Always shoot left crew here

Not a joke, too much finger. Use less of your finger on the trigger.

>snap cap in the mix
An excellent method for detecting poor habits.
Have a (you). Good advice is encouraged.

Or an empty case in the mag, if it loads it acts like a snap cap/ftf, if it doesnt you can practice clearing a malfunction.

You're right handed. What I want you to do is hold your hand out as if you're holding a gun, and pull your index finger as if you're pulling a trigger; notice how some of your other fingers also involuntarily curl? As you add pressure to the trigger, your hand flexes and the gun will naturally curve to the left a bit. If you're left handed, your shots will go to the right. Combine this natural tendency with a bit of flinch and voila your shots go left. The key is to use your support hand to prevent this "curling" to the left, and make sure the sights are aligned exactly where they should be throughout the whole trigger pull.

This, good post.

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Thanks Jow Forums I think next time I'll try adjusting the grip of my support hand to prevent curling and paying more attention to exactly where my finger is during the trigger pull.

Also, I was using snap caps this time. I didn't really notice much of any flinching, but they were kind of fun. I'll keep using them.

Different user, but snap caps really do help you notice and get you to focus on the problem right away. My flinch is for the most part all gone now, not nearly as exaggerated as before.

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too much counterstrike should be above the target
t. too much counterstrike

You try to compensate for the up-and-left climb, so it makes you go down-and-right.
Cmon, user.

Latent homosexual tendencies

Once you notice you are flinching, what can you do to stop that?

I stop reading for when the trigger is pulled. So kinda surprise yourself.

Flinching, pushing the trigger, or cross-eye dominance can all cause this.

Theres a few diff methods, one is putting a bullet/snapcap/bullet through the whole mag. To the point where you know which is snap and which is bang. For half the magazine you will not flinch.
Then you need to start visualizing shooting your gun, focusing on the front sight and clearing your mind that there is a bullet about to go bang. I dry fire my gun all the time in the house, I hold it firm, I identify my target, and I begin to squeeze the trigger. If I amp myself up enough I may even have a slight flinch in anticipation of a bang. Which I then begin to correct.
Mostly though, it's muscle memory your fighting against, and thats a powerful thing. Also what helped was to double up on earpro, so the "BANG" is less heard. Really helps with the flinching. From when I first started shooting my pistol to now I am far better now. But I go shooting a lot and focus on this when I do go.

Adjust your gun sights.