Keep
your head up and straight - not canted to the gun. Shoulders
square to the target. The arms slightly bent. Hands together.
Trigger finger free for movement. Place the strong hand on the
grip as high as possible, both front and rear. The strong hand
thumb should always be on the safety [for 1911 type safety].
(when shooting weak hand the thumb should also always ride the
safety if you have an ambi type) I relieve the bottom rear of
the trigger guard on my guns to put my right hand at a more natural
angle and reduce the pressure on the joint of the middle finger.
The
trigger finger should not touch or rub on the gun anywhere other
than the trigger. The pad of the finger should be used - not
the first joint. This will provide better trigger control.
The
placement of the weak hand in a freestyle grip is where most
people make mistakes. The fingers should all be under the
trigger guard. Your weak hand index finger should never be on
the front of the trigger guard.
There
should be total hand-to-hand contact at the left rear of the
gun. (relative to being right handed) The left
hand should not sit straight forward on the gun. It should be
canted at an angle with the back of the hand being higher on
the gun than the front. If you trace you thumb on your left hand
back past the knuckle to the base by the wrist, this should be
in between the first joint and the knuckle of the right thumb.
This is going to cock the left hand at an angle and complete
the contact between both hands. This also serves another purpose
of bringing different arm muscles in on controlling the gun.
You should feel the muscles on the top of the left arm by the
elbow doing the work. If the hand is straight you will feel the
strain on the bottom of the arm.
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