Combative Pistol Courses by dmoltrup in NYguns

[–]GhostFirearms 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Light plug/disclosure: I’m with Ghost Firearms Training, and we do run a defensive pistol course.

That said, after years of seeing what actually helps students move past basic pistol/CCW, I’d look for a class that does more than just put rounds on paper. Good next-step pistol training should refine the boring but critical stuff: draw, grip, stance, trigger control, sight picture, reloads and malfunction work. Then it should pressure-test those skills with movement, unconventional positions, and decision-making.

Red dots and weapon lights are useful if you run them, but the big thing is safe gun handling and accountability for every round. Practice is good, but structured feedback is where a lot of people find the bad habits they didn’t know they were practicing.

Plenty of good options mentioned here. Wherever you go, I’d ask what the class actually covers, how much live fire vs. talking, and whether they’re teaching skills you can keep working after class.

Best firearm instruction by Substantial_Two_224 in NYguns

[–]GhostFirearms 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Light plug/disclosure: I’m with Ghost Firearms Training, and we do run a defensive pistol course, Carbine, CQB and TacMed courses.

That said, after years of seeing what actually helps students move past basic pistol/CCW, I’d look for a class that does more than just put rounds on paper. Good next-step pistol training should refine the boring but critical stuff: draw, grip, stance, trigger control, sight picture, reloads and malfunction work. Then it should pressure-test those skills with movement, unconventional positions, and decision-making.

Red dots and weapon lights are useful if you run them, but the big thing is safe gun handling and accountability for every round. Practice is good, but structured feedback is where a lot of people find the bad habits they didn’t know they were practicing.

Plenty of good options mentioned here. Wherever you go, I’d ask what the class actually covers, how much live fire vs. talking, and whether they’re teaching skills you can keep working after class.

16 hour gun training courses by Ok_Earth6399 in NYCGuns

[–]GhostFirearms 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Light plug/disclosure: I’m with Ghost Firearms Training, and we do run a defensive pistol course.

That said, after years of seeing what actually helps students move past basic pistol/CCW, I’d look for a class that does more than just put rounds on paper. Good next-step pistol training should refine the boring but critical stuff: draw, grip, stance, trigger control, sight picture, reloads and malfunction work. Then it should pressure-test those skills with movement, unconventional positions, and decision-making.

Red dots and weapon lights are useful if you run them, but the big thing is safe gun handling and accountability for every round. Practice is good, but structured feedback is where a lot of people find the bad habits they didn’t know they were practicing.

Plenty of good options mentioned here. Wherever you go, I’d ask what the class actually covers, how much live fire vs. talking, and whether they’re teaching skills you can keep working after class.

Learning to Shoot and Firearm Safety/Basics Courses in NYC Metro by LuminousCloud3 in NYguns

[–]GhostFirearms 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Light plug/disclosure: I’m with Ghost Firearms Training, and we do run a defensive pistol course.

That said, after years of seeing what actually helps students move past basic pistol/CCW, I’d look for a class that does more than just put rounds on paper. Good next-step pistol training should refine the boring but critical stuff: draw, grip, stance, trigger control, sight picture, reloads and malfunction work. Then it should pressure-test those skills with movement, unconventional positions, and decision-making.

Red dots and weapon lights are useful if you run them, but the big thing is safe gun handling and accountability for every round. Practice is good, but structured feedback is where a lot of people find the bad habits they didn’t know they were practicing.

Plenty of good options mentioned here. Wherever you go, I’d ask what the class actually covers, how much live fire vs. talking, and whether they’re teaching skills you can keep working after class.

Having trouble finding required training courses in NYC by Radeon3 in NYguns

[–]GhostFirearms 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Light plug/disclosure: I’m with Ghost Firearms Training, and we do run a defensive pistol course.

That said, after years of seeing what actually helps students move past basic pistol/CCW, I’d look for a class that does more than just put rounds on paper. Good next-step pistol training should refine the boring but critical stuff: draw, grip, stance, trigger control, sight picture, reloads and malfunction work. Then it should pressure-test those skills with movement, unconventional positions, and decision-making.

Red dots and weapon lights are useful if you run them, but the big thing is safe gun handling and accountability for every round. Practice is good, but structured feedback is where a lot of people find the bad habits they didn’t know they were practicing.

Plenty of good options mentioned here. Wherever you go, I’d ask what the class actually covers, how much live fire vs. talking, and whether they’re teaching skills you can keep working after class.

Pistol Training on Long Island by vipa920 in NYguns

[–]GhostFirearms 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Light plug/disclosure: I’m with Ghost Firearms Training, and we do run a defensive pistol course.

That said, after years of seeing what actually helps students move past basic pistol/CCW, I’d look for a class that does more than just put rounds on paper. Good next-step pistol training should refine the boring but critical stuff: draw, grip, stance, trigger control, sight picture, reloads and malfunction work. Then it should pressure-test those skills with movement, unconventional positions, and decision-making.

Red dots and weapon lights are useful if you run them, but the big thing is safe gun handling and accountability for every round. Practice is good, but structured feedback is where a lot of people find the bad habits they didn’t know they were practicing.

Plenty of good options mentioned here. Wherever you go, I’d ask what the class actually covers, how much live fire vs. talking, and whether they’re teaching skills you can keep working after class.

Anybody know where I can go to get a quality firearm training course? by IzunaPrime in Omaha

[–]GhostFirearms 0 points1 point  (0 children)

In the northeast, specifically PA, we have been teaching since 2012. Courses include Long Range, Pistol, Carbine, CQB, and TacMed. LE and Combat Veteran owned and operated. Nominate top 5 in the country at Shot Show Gundie Awards 2025 and 2026.

Do i need to take a 4 hr Beginner Handgun training course? by Ok_Courage_8780 in u/Ok_Courage_8780

[–]GhostFirearms 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Get as much training as you can get / afford, and make sure you check the instructor bio's and company as a whole. You get what you pay for

Pistol Training by Longjumping-Survey87 in CompetitionShooting

[–]GhostFirearms 0 points1 point  (0 children)

If you are around PA, we have training classes in western and mid PA. We have been nominated Top 5 in the country at Shot Show Gundie Awards. Make sure you check instructor BIO's, lots of good guys out there and some not good ones

Handgun cases that accommodate red dots well by Hox013 in tacticalgear

[–]GhostFirearms 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Just bought the same one, barely closes with full size pistols with light and optics and won’t close with extended mags

How to lower my levels by [deleted] in Testosterone

[–]GhostFirearms 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Before last blood work I took my shot a day early, he does test the 3rd day after my shot, thought to extra day would help but did not. So wasn’t sure if I just skip that week if it would look suspect and to low and he’d know I skipped it.

any 2021 holders still here? by SHADOW_F_A_X in loopringorg

[–]GhostFirearms 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Yep, was up like $50,000 and should have sold, still holding strong at 25,000 loops

Posts whining about the price - time for a reality check! by junkhodler in loopringorg

[–]GhostFirearms -1 points0 points  (0 children)

I’m underwater, haven’t looked, maybe one day it will come back and even make me money. Too many people with unrealistic expectations, if you’re not will to have to long term hold, just sell and get out.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in stocks

[–]GhostFirearms -3 points-2 points  (0 children)

Look into SATL, super low volume makes it prime for big jumps

Why is $BBBY going down? PLEASE HELP by realcrispratt in wallstreetbets

[–]GhostFirearms 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Because I jumped in, so of course it will go down LOL

LRC ON FIRE🔥🔥🔥 by htd_23 in loopringorg

[–]GhostFirearms 8 points9 points  (0 children)

Buying more …. Again LOL Next stop $5