TX2Guns: Armed Citizen Corner: Train Like a Samurai (10 Arrows)

Practice doesn’t make perfect. Practice makes PERMANENT.

You’ve heard a lot of advice on different training philosophies – ways to maximize the results you achieve. The fact is, desultory training (grunts: desultory) is a waste of time, ammunition and money. It may get you killed. Read this and pay attention. Mad Duo (grunts: desultory)

Train like a samurai: 10 Arrows

When I was I kid, I was a huge history buff. I was captivated by one of the most cyclical events which occur in human history—the phenomenon of war. Throughout history, you can easily identify warrior cultures and those which were not. The warrior cultures would eventually claim the less brutal and strategic of peoples, taking their land and resources for their own. One of the cultures I admired then, and still do today is the ancient samurai of feudal Japan.

As a teenager, preparing to leave my home to serve in the military, I read every book I could find on how the Samurai lived, trained and fought. Having fought the Japanese in world war two, my grandfather retained a deep rooted hatred for the country until the day he died. In a way, this open animosity drew me closer to my studies.

Mad Duo Nate on taking your rifle to the range and training like a samurai.

There are many conflicting stories and historical accounts in the story of this warrior culture. Often a blend of fiction and fact, you will find a certain existential aspect to many tales, mixed with the possibility of the supernatural (magic), and divine intervention for chosen shoguns as well as individual warriors.  It was during this time I learned the difference between plinking and training. One is the frivolous expenditure of ammunition to merely make noise with little result; the other is hitting your target in as accurate and efficient manner as possible.  As a boy, I shot more rounds of ammunition after school on a daily base then I would during my first few years in the service.

The Samurai Archer

There was story that stands out, which I have based all my marksmanship training off of since I read it as a boy. It came from an account of how the samurai archer archetype would train at his craft.

Every day the archer would awake and conduct his morning routine. Eat breakfast, spend time with the family, paint or write poetry. Do whatever he pleases until he felt relaxed and ready, his focus sharp and mind clear of distraction. He would then leave to train, going outside with his bow and equipment. Starting his craft, the profession of arms, early in life, he has grown up with a bow in his hands. Setting a target up at close range, he will shoot one arrow into the bull’s eye. He will then pace out a further distance, and again shoot a single arrow into the center of his target.

He will repeat this for every distance his bow was capable of shooting accurately, reaching his own maximum effective range. Ten arrows, ten bull’s eyes.  If he missed a single target, he would shoot until he hit the bull, and upon striking it, he would immediately cease training.

Why? So that his mind and body would remember what it took to hit, not reinforce what it takes to miss.

His archery practice complete, having ended on a high note, he would go train with the sword or spear, or simply retire for the day. The next day he would repeat this routine, starting with a first round hit, at a seemingly ridiculous distance, then proceeding to hit with one arrow at every range that he could. He would start with success, and end with success. If that took 10 minutes or two hours, it didn’t matter. He didn’t walk off the range a failure.

I don’t care about the historical accuracy of this tale. I don’t care if it is more myth than fact. I don’t care if it’s incorrect, or wrong in anyway. I don’t have a degree in history, and the book which I read this has been long lost to my memory (as has the public library in which I read it).  The important thing is that I believed in it. It made perfect sense to me then. And it makes sense to me still.

samurai2

How I train

I don’t go to the range to plink; I go to the range to train. I go in the cold, the heat, the rain and snow. There is no such thing as perfect weather in which you should refine your skill. You are as likely to smoke a violent criminal in a parking lot in February as you are in July. You are as likely to defend yourself in any month or situation as the next. Indoors, outdoors. Rain or shine. If you wear gloves every day in the winter cold, wear them when you shoot in winter months. Train as realistically as you can, don’t cheat yourself and set yourself up for failure because of the  plainly visible variables you worked your way around. If you carry concealed daily, but always wear a battle belt to the range to train, you are probably setting yourself up for failure.

Consistency equals accuracy in all ways.

On the range, I start at a very close range. A range that I know I cannot miss at. A distance that gives immediate positive results. Satisfied with a first round hit, I will move further away and focus at least one magazine on the fundamentals of marksmanship, with slow accurate fire. Once again good hits are expected, or I will not move on. The bulk of my ammunition will be spent on drills I need work on. My weak points. I go to the range to find my deficiencies and improve on them, not make myself feel like a bad ass.

I want to fail, so that I can learn how not to fail.

I want to fail on the range, so that the likelihood of failing real world is less likely. But if I should fail, I have conditioned my mind and body to correct the problems and stay in the fight. After I have shot each drill to satisfaction, I end on a high note. I will end the way I began, with success—even if that means going back to the tediously close target. Shoot slowly and concentrate on the fundamentals; half-way through that magazine, if you shoot a perfectly placed round, STOP. There is no shame in going home with loose rounds. Take them home for next time, or give them to a training partner. Just don’t waste them, reinforcing subpar accuracy and leaving the range frustrated after a good day of improvement. Start with a perfect hit, leave with a perfect hit. This is not an unreasonable goal.

I have found throughout my life that shooting this way has paid dividends. I have not always had the opportunity to train or to fight this way, but the mindset of the Samurai Archer has always stuck with me. To miss is unacceptable—train the possibility out. A shot is not always a hit, always get your hit. Hit until you no longer need to. This format of training has held true for me for the times where I could not train due to deployments, ammo availability or lack of money in the bank. I reinforce live fire by conditioning with dry fire whenever possible. If I’m broke, and have little money for classes let alone ammunition, I will scale down my round count to still follow this basic format.

Over the years many people have heard me tell this story, and my adaptation of it in my individual training. Many of my junior Marines and peers, as well as civilian friends have adopted their own form of this system, with great result. It’s not for everyone, and perhaps there is no value to it other than believing in it enough to foster consistency and accuracy in the mind. People have mocked it, or have told me it’s wrong, based off historic fiction, or is just a dated way of training. That’s fine. It works for me, and I don’t expect that to change. Regardless, go to the range with a no-shit plan. Follow that plan, and find your failure points. Improve them, and revisit them even once you have become satisfied with your skill. Remember that the mastery of the basics is more important than the cool guy drills executed terribly.

10 arrows, 10 yard lines, 10 hits.

Read the Original Article at Breach Bang Clear

Train Often and Train Realistically!

Spread the love
                

Share This Story, Choose Your Platform!

About the Author: NC Scout

NC Scout is the nom de guerre of a former Infantry Scout and Sergeant in one of the Army’s best Reconnaissance Units. He has combat tours in both Iraq and Afghanistan. He teaches a series of courses focusing on small unit skills rarely if ever taught anywhere else in the prepping and survival field, including his RTO Course which focuses on small unit communications. In his free time he is an avid hunter, bushcrafter, writer, long range shooter, prepper, amateur radio operator and Libertarian activist. He can be contacted at [email protected] or via his blog at brushbeater.wordpress.com .

7 Comments

  1. mike June 19, 2020 at 08:10

    Yes, archery is a martial art. Traditional archery especially requires a certain physical fitness and trained muscle memory coupled with complete mental concentration (sightless instinctive shooting), to accomplish any kind of consistent accuracy. I find myself training in a similar fashion as described when at the range with my bow. If my mind is not focused I shoot and then retrieve only one arrow at a time. If I am focused I will shoot 2 to 4 arrows and try to hit and break the knock on the first arrow if it was on target. I always must group the last batch of arrows on target before I will stop for the day.

    I have noticed the tempo of people in the countryside training with firearms has increased dramatically over the last decade. This is a good thing. It seems like all day long any time I am afield hunting in the fall you can hear constant plinking/practice shooting going on in the distance from many directions. The unfortunate downside of this is that it seems to mostly consist of undisciplined semi-auto rapid fire until the magazine is empty. Very little single shots at long intervals and no double taps or controlled high volume shooting. There is a lot of ammo being burned up out there and it makes you wonder if it is doing them any good.

  2. Michael June 19, 2020 at 08:38

    Personally I like cowboy action shooting set up with shoot and no shoot targets that move and are partially visible through doorways and windows. Also a Hostage moving target is included. Plywood, cardboard, paint, some targets, some fishing line not hard to establish. I have never had a hostile in my 20+ year career ever stand there awaiting my response. Once you get good at that add some wind-sprints and push ups to add some real world shakiness in your ability to shoot.

    All this requires a safe place to shoot as stray shaky shots will occur.

    • NC Scout June 19, 2020 at 09:00

      Cowboy Action Shooting is really cool stuff. I was into it many years back, running a .45 Long and a 45-70. Heck of a lot of fun.

  3. Bad_Brad June 19, 2020 at 14:03

    Ranges with action pistol or rifle set ups are hard to find. So our little group has been making the half hour trek up into the National Forrest and training there for the last 5 or so years. We have a good selection of reactive targets and set up a course of fire. Heavy on pistol. But every time we go up we all start with a warm up mag and just focus on the wall. It seems to help a lot.

  4. Anonymous June 21, 2020 at 19:00

    5

  5. Anonymous June 23, 2020 at 20:16

    4.5

  6. Mike Jones June 25, 2020 at 20:45

    Something else I read about the samurai and other martial cultures ( Viking, Spartan) was they handled their weapons every day, not just for training but for familiarization.

Comments are closed.

GUNS N GEAR

Categories

Archives

Spread the love