Killing With No Regard to Healing. Are Your Priorities Backwards?

Take note of the date and time. Check your clocks and your calendar. Write it down if you have to, I’m about to admit an error on my part. That’s right, my judgment was clouded. I mistakenly thought that when addressing the matter of traumatic first aid, life-saving measures used to stop-gap a potentially terminal injury that “the choir” would understand.

I’m not speaking about the sheep. Sheep are by nature just that, sheep. They are subservient and rely on something other than themselves for protection and salvation. Sheep are happy in their helplessness.

Win Guns, Gear, and Training

Target Audience

I am speaking of gun owners, those who look at firearms as a tool potentially used to save their lives. I’m talking about men and women who take guns to the field and harvest wild game. These are all people who consider themselves citizens, not subjects. I’m also referring to folks who spice up their conversations with words and phrases like “terminal ballistics”, “stopping power”, “hydrostatic shock” and “permanent wound cavity”.

I’m referring to the guys who revere the names Cooper, Jordan, Keith, Browning, Winchester, and Colt. When addressing an audience populated with the aforementioned individuals I mistakenly assumed that they would appreciate and understand that any man, and I mean human, armed and prepared to take a life must at the same time be prepared and equipped to save one.

This is not the first piece I have written where I dared to mention the “T” word: tourniquet. Over the last several years I’ve penned a number of reviews mentioning life-saving, medial trauma training and gear available to U.S. Military troops, law enforcement officers, and citizens alike. These reviews were not published in the “Ladies Home Journal” or “Cat Fancy”, they were printed in paper and electronic media geared toward the meat-eater. Despite this attempt to target the correct audience, I’ve experienced such a cacophony of whining, moaning, and lame excuse offering that I can no longer hold it in.

Willing to Kill but not Heal

Ed applies a pressure dressing to Mark at a SOTG-U Beyond the Bandaid Course

Ed applies a pressure dressing to Mark at a SOTG-U Beyond the Bandaid Course

For every single review written that addresses Tactical Combat Casualty Care or what I call “Beyond the Band-Aid” training, there are one hundred more written by myriad authors and bloggers extolling the virtues of this firearm or that as the greatest “man-stopper”. Personal defense ammunition is promoted for expansion qualities, wound cavity, “energy transfer”, and, of course our favorite “stopping power”.

Were the society’s sheep to happen on any of these gun and ammo articles they would likely faint away from shock. But the choir embraces them. They memorize the paragraphs and regurgitate the words in future gun shop or shooting range conversations. Never does it occur to these folks to pen a letter to the editor or “blog” their disgust about the author’s discussion of lethal force or for implying that one man might be forced to kill another man, let alone recommend the best tool for doing so. These issues don’t give them a moment of pause.

However, when these same steely-eyed, gun show killers stumble upon an article that mentions the words tourniquet, pressure dressing, nasal airway, or chest decompression needle they become apoplectic. When the suggestion is made that a citizen, given a nominal amount of professional training can be equipped to stop a life-threatening injury and stabilize a trauma victim until the professionals arrive, they are beside themselves with disbelief.

The excuses are innumerable and not based on logic or experience but emotion and preconceived notions and flat out misconception. Many will fall back on the decades old “ABC” patient assessment taught by the American Red Cross. I like the Red Cross and I was one of their instructors many years ago. I’ve been certified and re-certified in “Family First Aid”, CPR and the Heimlich maneuver more times than I can remember, starting back in Junior High School.

Guess what? The CPR I was taught in Jr. High in 1981, don’t laugh, is not the same as the CPR taught today. It has been updated and modified, numerous times. Telling me that you were in the Army in 1987 and they told you never to use a tourniquet or “only as a last resort after all other means had failed” does not impress me.

Mary Asks Professor Paul Question During Class

Mary asks professor Paul a question about bandaging during a SOTG-U Beyond the Bandaid Class

By the same token, relating that you are an Intergalactically Certified EMT (cue Beastie Boys music) and that your S.O.P. expressly forbids the use of a tourniquet except as last resort again does not blow up my skirt. You show up on scene with an Emergency Room on wheels. You have a huge backpack full of medical goodies and a buddy or two to help you use it all.

All the naysayers, the Monday Morning quarterbacks, and disapproving civilian medics are completely missing the point of the exercise. That point being a trained individual using readily available and easy to carry material (no whole blood, IV fluid, pumps, masks, O2 etc.) to stop-gap a genuine life-threatening injury until professional medical personnel can arrive. “I don’t need to learn that, emergency medicine is best left to the trained professionals”. That is exactly what the sheep say about defending yourself with a gun. Leave it to “professionals”.

Reality, not Fantasy

Right now on planet Earth there are innumerable men and women walking around above ground because of the Tactical Combat Casualty Care (TCCC) program. Men and women are alive that somehow, by the grace of God, survived the physical and emotional distress of having a tourniquet stop an arterial bleeding injury while they awaited transport to a trauma center. And, many have all FOUR limbs to boot. American servicemen are with their families today because another trooper, not a doctor or medic, kept an airway open by putting a tube into their nose or stopped a tension pneumothorax from killing them by relieving the pressure with a big, scary needle.

What does all this have to do with stateside medical care or “Beyond the Band-Aid” training? It’s no more difficult than understanding that a severed artery in Iraq and a severed artery in Tampa, Florida have the same result; the death of the victim in minutes, two to three, not five or ten. High speed vehicle crashes often produce partial or complete amputations. If an artery in the victim’s arm or leg is compromised only those at the scene will have any chance of saving their lives. The ambulance crew five to ten minutes away cannot arrive in time to stop a true life-threatening bleeding injury. But you could.

For those of you who carry a gun for self-preservation, congratulations, you are doing the right thing. You must understand that even if you win the gunfight you can end up bleeding. I have a close friend who won his gunfight but still ended up with a bullet in the upper chest. The good guys can bleed too. How would you feel if you stopped an assault by a crazed drug-addict only to discover that your wife, husband, or child now lay critically wounded at your feet and there is nothing you can do but hold their hand and pray for an ambulance?

A Search for Balance

Mark Nose Hose Student of the Gun University Beyond the Bandaid Class

Mark gets a nose hose Student of the Gun University Beyond the Bandaid Class

In his book, The Five Rings, Miyamoto Musashi admonishes that “A warrior should have an understanding of the peaceful arts as well as the killing arts.” Musashi advised that if a warrior is to learn the true Way, he needs to study more than just the sword. He should study art and poetry and sculpture. Would not the study of traumatic first aid, the ability to stop-gap a mortal injury, fall into this category?

You may study TCCC or Beyond the Band-Aid and never be called upon to use it. The same could be said for your firearm and yet there it is. We, the choir, the ones who should be enlightened spend much of our time learning and practice putting holes in things. Should not some of that effort be put into plugging the holes?

If you’ll brag to your fellows about the new super-death machine you bought at the last gun show but the word tourniquet sends you running you need to take a long hard look in the mirror before casting stones. Do you willingly and readily talk about using deadly force while at the same time are too squeamish to consider emergency medical care to save a life? If the answer is yes, I would offer that you have your priorities out of order.

Leave Your Comments Below

Have you ever been in a situation where you could have/did have to stop-gap a life-threatening injury until the professionals could get to the scene? Tell us about your experience in the comments below!

 

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Paul Markel

Founder & President at Student of the Gun
Paul G. Markel has worn many hats during his lifetime. He has been a U.S. Marine, Police Officer, Professional Bodyguard, and Small Arms and Tactics Instructor. Mr. Markel has been writing professionally for law enforcement and firearms periodicals for nearly twenty years with hundreds and hundreds of articles in print. Paul is a regular guest on nationally syndicated radio talk shows and subject matter expert in firearms training and use of force. Mr. Markel has been teaching safe and effective firearms handling to students young and old for decades and has worked actively with the 4-H Shooting Sports program. Paul holds numerous instructor certifications in multiple disciplines and a Bachelor’s degree in conflict resolution; nonetheless, he is and will remain a dedicated Student of the Gun.

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Comments

  1. Muncy Zuber

    Agree with Marty and I have been first on the scene with my First Aid Kit at Home, having to Assess, Adapt & Overcome with someone bleeding is NO FUN! I now try to keep my Pocket Trauma Kit ( from SOTG Store) like a Katana- always within Arms Reach.
    Wow, Quoting The Five Rings & Sun Tzu in one week- Impressive!!!
    Thanks-Important Topic!

  2. joe

    I went through combat lifesaving right before exiting the service, i earned the right to carry the “bag”. Picked one up as soon as i could and had it filled and i cary it with me to this day. It doesn’t have all the new pieces that they do now, and i was trained with a j-tube instead of the one for the nose, i try and remember all the training I had then and teach it to my kids that are both in boyscouts. I would love to kit up further but money is always an issue, so i deal with what i have and pass on my knowledge, if it spurts put a tourniquet or pressure bandage on it.

    1. ralph

      The most important piece of equipment inany medical emergency is the one paced between your ears. RTB, USA (ret) PA>

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