Gabby Franco
๐ค SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
Like maybe a range is an hour away from you and you finally get to settle down at seven o'clock at night.
Now you got to drive an hour to that range or maybe it's an outdoor range and the weather's bad.
Or maybe you have littles at home and you got to wait for them to go to bed.
Well, then either get a babysitter or you go by yourself or whatever.
So this kind of cuts out a lot of the barriers for, like you just said, for those busy people that just may not have a lot of extra time.
And then there's no rule that says you have to practice 60 minutes a day.
It's like putting your hands on it.
Maybe five or 10 minutes a day is something I tell ladies when I train them.
when I'm trying to fix scars, like you have the teacup grip or something, it's like, you know, you can practice five minutes a day, just picking it up, getting a good grip and putting it down.
You don't have to go from picking it up, pulling the trigger, you know, like all the whole rotation, just picking apart a piece that you're struggling with and maybe pick it up 20 times or, you know, or pulling the trigger 20 times to get, you know, to train your brain about pulling it, you know, in a steady pace versus, you know,
jerking that trigger.
have you guys ever been to shot show?
I call it, I call it beer, beard and sausage fest because seriously, like there is, I mean, even a shooting match, I shoot competition, USPSA and IDPA.
And there's definitely, we're looking at less than 10% of the population in competition or women or at shot show or women.
So it's, you know, it's definitely a smaller demographic.
And I,
I think women get intimidated.
We learn differently.
And so when there's a lot of men instructors or you go to a gun range and then saw men, you know, I don't know how many times I've taken a gal to the range to do our session.
And, you know, doc starts telling me how to, how to do the, his, his,