riverman67
Master
Make sure you go to dinner with Coach (and as many other people as possible) at Outback in Clarksville.
As of three years ago that waitress still worked at that outback.
Make sure you go to dinner with Coach (and as many other people as possible) at Outback in Clarksville.
I can always consider a consensus for grilling out at the house Saturday.
Zero creepy wait staff.....
The girl (waitress) wasn't creepy, just inexperienced, overwhelmed, and put in a difficult situation by a bad manager. That manager was awful and made what was a minor problem into a big problem with her hostility, lies, accusations, and all around being a See You Next Tuesday. Incredibly bad customer service, incredibly bad leadership, and an incredibly bad example for her employees.
I expect you wrote a sternly worded letter to Paul Hogan about the service? As the spokesman for everything remotely connected to Australia, he should be held accountable.
I can always consider a consensus for grilling out at the house Saturday.
Zero creepy wait staff.....
Short version is that I am glad I took this class.
I am definitely interested in hearing more feedback on this class from you as well as any others that participated in the class.
On a related issue. J Bishop is a good guy and doing great things to try and bring new blood to police training down there in his area. I hope he continues with that effort and I hope some more in the LE community follow his example and lead.
Damn it Jeff. Keep up the good work.
I also appreciate the kind words. I need to venture up north and catch a class with both Coach and Cedartop sometime soon.
I like to encourage people to take CRG class with Randy because I see how much of it:
A.) is useful/applicable in all facets of daily life (not just when guns are involved)
B.) Parallels much of what we see/deal with in the LE context.
I agree with what Coach says, this is not a "Hardware" class (drills of draws/reloads/malfunctions/etc), it's more of a "Software" class. A good balance of Technician and Tactician makes for a formidable person. It's not to say there aren't techniques/skills/drills to take away from CRG, it's that successful understanding of CRG class should reshape how you deal with situations.
When I describe CRG to people, I usually say it's more of a "Tactical Problem Solving" class than just a "Shooting Class"
It's easy to train and retrain on the same stuff we're already good at (it keeps our egos un-bruised). Choosing to push outside your comfort zone widens your view on the world and exposes deficiencies you may not have known you had. With the amount of information and skills picked up from Randy in just about any class he teaches, it usually turns out to be one of the best returns on investment you can make in training dollars.
That's only true if you're actually good at something.