They keep asking ...
Recurring Questions
By Kathy Jackson
Some questions just seem to get asked over and over again. I
presume these questions show up so often in my email box because it is gut-wrenching
to feel that someone you live with and love deeply has made herself vulnerable to a
criminal attack. So what's a guy to do? Here's my take on it.
"My wife doesn't like guns. How do I change her mind?"
I have no idea. I do have a few ideas how you might get her to
hate them, however. If you avoid doing those things, and if you
are patient, chances are that your wife will eventually learn to tolerate
your firearms collection. She may even surprise you and take up shooting
on her own. But the harder you push her, the less likely that is to happen.
Some tips:
- Do store your firearms safely,
and do consult your partner about the safety steps you
are taking with your firearms. (For example: ask her to help you pick
out cable locks or storage safes, and discuss the "this will help me handle
guns safely" angle when considering a firearms class for yourself.)
- Do obsessively follow every
safety rule you know, every time you shoot or take the guns out of your
safe. And do draw her attention to your safe gun-handling.
- Do not argue about whether
or not you are going to own guns. Instead, focus on discussing how you
can safely store the guns you are going to own.
- Do discuss with her what
she should do if she ever comes across one of your firearms when you are
not home. See the article titled What to
Do With a Found Gun for ideas about the types of things she
may need to know, since she lives with a gun owner.
- Do invite her to the range
with you whenever you go.
- Do not tire her ears with
gruesome stories about women who were battered, beaten, abused, raped, mutilated, and/or murdered "because
they did not own a gun." There's really no point.
"My wife is totally clueless about self-defense. How do I get her
to care about this stuff?"
If I had the answer to that one, I could make a fortune selling it!
As far as I know, there's no way to make an adult human being do anything
at all that they don't want to do.
As an adult, your wife has made her own choices about her state of alertness
and what she is willing to do in her own defense. We all do. Whether those
choices are good ones or not, they're her choices. Just as you
wouldn't much like it if she constantly lobbied for you to ______ (eat better,
lose weight, exercise more, drink less, see less of a friend she doesn't
like, spend more time at home and less at work, etc etc etc), she probably
wouldn't appreciate any hardcore lobbying on your part.
Let me put that a little more bluntly: if you would like her to respect
your choices about self-defense and firearms, you owe it to her to
respect her choices in the same area. Anything less is just not fair.
That said, you can help her make sure that she has made a thoughtful choice,
and not just drifted to where she is. You do this not by lecturing, but
simply by asking questions when the opportunity comes up. If you watch
the news together, or read the paper, and there's a "someone was
attacked" story, try asking her what she thinks the person in the
news should have done. Do not answer for her. Refuse to fill
in the blanks. Just ask, listen to her answer, and then let the conversation
go elsewhere. Even if her answers are not realistic, resist the urge to
set her straight. Never lecture. Bite your tongue before you say anything
even remotely like "She should have ..." , or worse, "You
should..."
Why not lecture? It's simple: Your goal is not to provide the answers. If you
provide answers, she will very likely begin struggling against the answer
you provide (either in her mind, or out loud). But you don't want her
arguing against your answer -- you want her to look for an answer of her
own. You want her to struggle with the question itself.
You want her to think about that question and then eventually begin to
ask such questions herself. So avoid the temptation to spoon-feed her the
answers.
This is about getting the questions into her head, not about what answers
come out. It's all about your wife's reasoning, not about yours. Your
basic goal is to get her to ask such questions for herself.
Once she starts asking the questions, she'll find the answers on her own.
She's a smart person (she married you after all!), so you can trust that
once the questions are there, the answers will eventually follow. But the
questions have to come before the answers do. Until the questions are
asked, the answers will remain unwanted.
"Should I sneak new firearms into the safe when my wife isn't looking?"
Not if you want an honest relationship.1
Try this instead: save up twice as much as you will need for any
gun purchase. If the gun you want costs $500, save $1000. The day you
purchase the gun, hand your wife $500 in cash, and tell her that since
you just spent $500 on your hobby, it's only fair that she should
have $500 to spend on her hobbies. She'll never gripe about a new
gun again.
If the household budget won't allow her to spend as much on her hobbies
as you spend on yours, she might have a point when she says you can't
afford another gun.
Except where otherwise noted, all articles and images on
this web site © 2006-2009 by Kathy Jackson. For permission to quote, please
contact author.
Disclaimer: The author of this
site assumes that you are an adult human being capable of making your
own choices and taking responsibility for same. If you are not an adult,
or are not capable of taking responsibility for your own choices, STOP.
Do not read anything else on this site. The author has made a reasonable,
good-faith effort to assure that the articles herein are accurate and
contain good advice, but hereby advises the reader that the author is
a normal human being who makes the normal number of human mistakes. Deal
with it. If it sounds stupid to you, don't do it. The author accepts absolutely
no responsibility whatsoever for anything you might say or do as a result
of reading any material on this site. Live your own life.