Most people who train for self-defense spend all their time on the problem in front of them: the draw, the shot, the target going down.
Nobody trains for the three seconds after.
That's a problem. Because those three seconds might be the ones that kill you.
The Threat You Never See
Here's what I know from real gunfights: one of the biggest killers on a battlefield isn't the threat in front of you. It's the threat you never see to your flank or your rear.
The same is true in a civilian self-defense situation. You're at a gas station. Someone pulls a gun. You respond. You win the immediate fight, and then your brain locks onto the guy on the ground like a laser because your sympathetic nervous system has flooded your body with adrenaline and your vision has tunneled down to a six-inch circle.
Meanwhile, his partner is ten feet to your left.
This is not a hypothetical. Threat fixation is a documented physiological response. When you're in a fight, it is almost physically impossible to pull your eyes off the threat in front of you without a trained system that overrides that instinct. You will stare at the horrible thing. Ask me how I know.
That system is called post-shoot protocol. And if you carry a gun, you need one.
What Post-Shoot Protocol Actually Is
Post-shoot protocol is a secondary assessment you run immediately after an engagement ends. It has four jobs.
Are there other threats? The guy you just stopped may not have come alone. Other threats may be closing in from directions you haven't looked at in the last thirty seconds of chaos.
Where are the friendlies? If there's another concealed carrier in that gas station reacting to the same threat, and you stand up and start moving without knowing where they are, you may walk straight into their line of fire. Friendly-on-friendly incidents happen. Situational awareness after the shot is how you avoid becoming one part of that terrible statistic.
Where should you be? Your current position may be awful. There may be better cover ten feet away. You need to assess before you move, not leap out from your cover and run into a new problem.
Are you hit? Adrenaline is a powerful anesthetic. You can take a round and not feel it immediately. A quick self-check before you do anything else is not paranoia. It's smart.
The Script That Slows You Down on Purpose
Here's what I actually run after a shooting, and why the wording matters.
Is he down? Yes, he is. Did he bring any friends? Did he bring any friends? Does anyone else want to play? Does anyone else want to play? Return to target. Last check. Last check.
I say it out loud or in my head every time, and it is deliberately written to take time to say.
When your nervous system is maxed out, a fast scan is nearly worthless. Your eyes are moving but you're not actually seeing anything. The script forces a pace that lets your brain process what your eyes are taking in. You are slicing the battlefield in 90-degree segments, holding on each one long enough to actually register what's there.
While I'm running that script I'm also doing two other things: topping off my magazine if the situation allows, and identifying where I want to move next if I need to improve my position.
The Kabuki Theater Problem
One thing that drives me and my instructors crazy on the range is students who know they're supposed to scan after a drill but do it like they're performing for the camera. A quick head swivel left, a quick head swivel right, back to the target. Check.
That’s not a scan. That’s theater.
Here's an important distinction though. Not every range drill needs a post-shoot protocol attached to it. If you're working your drawstroke, work your drawstroke. If you're drilling reloads, drill reloads. Don't staple a tactical scan onto a skill-building exercise just because it feels more operator. It wastes range time and it trains the performance rather than the skill.
Post-shoot protocol belongs in scenario-based training where you're simulating a real engagement. Put it there. Do it right. Slow down enough to actually see.
Build the System Before You Need It
The reason you train a script is that under stress you will not rise to the occasion, you will fall to the level of your training. If you have never practiced pulling your eyes off a downed threat and methodically clearing your surroundings, you will not do it when it counts. Your brain will default to staring at the ground and waiting for your hands to stop shaking.
Build the habit now. Run the script. Slow down. See the battlefield. That's how you win the fight you're in and survive the one you didn't know was coming.
Remember, Train Hard. Train Smart. And make sure your training scars don't get you killed.
Leave a Comment