AUG 22 · SAT Manipulations

Click Means Chore

Click Means Chore

Dry-Fire · At Home

15 reps with dummy rounds: dead trigger → tap, rack, press. Then 5 double-feed clearances: lock, strip, rack-rack-rack, reload. Certain, not frantic.

Live-Fire · At the Range

Seed dummy rounds randomly in 4 mags. 20 rds at 7 yd on the cards — every click gets its tap-rack and the shot still gets its hit.

Service Pistol

Clear with the light mounted if you run one — it changes your rack grip.

Concealed Carry

Small slides fight the rack — full overhand grip, not the slingshot.

Carbine

Tap (mag), rack (charging handle), reassess. Double-feed: lock, rip, rack x3, reload.

Optional Standard

AUX (when ready): tap-rack to a hit in under 2.0s from the click.

Mind

Normalcy bias whispers “this isn't happening.” Pre-deciding your first move mutes it.

Your Daily Callout — By Archetype

The Initiator Yours

A malfunction is not an emergency. It's a two-second chore. Move like it.

The Scout Yours

Your hands already diagnosed it — the click told you everything.

The Guardian Yours

The gun quit; you don't. That's the lesson, and it travels.

The Strategist Yours

You can't schedule a jam. Improvise inside a trained pattern.

Coach's Note

Layer: induced double-feed mid-string, on the clock (AUX only).

Standards & Safety
The Four Rules — Every Rep, No Exceptions
  1. Treat every firearm as if it is loaded — always, no matter what you think you know.
  2. Never let the muzzle cover anything you are not willing to destroy.
  3. Keep your finger off the trigger until your sights are on target and you have decided to fire.
  4. Be sure of your target — and everything beyond it.

Dry-fire: no ammunition in the room. Verify the firearm is clear — twice. Use a safe backstop. When you finish, say it out loud: “Dry fire is over.”