Attended the Modern Samurai Project Path to Performance in Amherst, OH end of May. The course is a combination 1-day AIWB and 2-Day RDS pistol course. I had planned this trip over a year ago as the MSP courses sell out quickly. Overall, it was an awesome experience and will definitely look for other MSP courses in the future. I have a bunch of notes I took from the course, and still haven't sat down to review them. Learned so many things, as well as many "aha" moments, along with "wtf" moments during the three days. Jedi has a lot of content on YT and IG, but there's no substitution for his in-person instruction as well as his awesome staff instructors.
Some highlights:
1) Ammo situation was a concern going in. The original plan was for this course to be hosted at a range over an hour away. I had arranged for ammo through the owner of that range. About 2-3 months ago, pistol and rifle shooting was shut down at that range due to an injunction from neighbors. So only trap and skeet. The range owner gave me the run around and didn't get back to me. I was willing to meet him to pay for the ammo I had ordered, but no response. Received email on change of course location 3 weeks ahead of the course. Ended up working out better as I found bulk 9 mm ammo on sale at a Cabela's maybe 10 mins away from where the course moved to, and at a way better price. Bonus was that I was forced to visit the Cabela's in Avon, OH. Awesome location and excellent customer service.
2) Jedi breaks down what he teaches in an excellent manner, and progression as the course progresses is clear and tested along the way with skills challenges. The challenges are timed, one at a time, and most include prizes. More on that later. Key is to focus on YOUR individual progress and improvement during the course. There were some excellent shooters at the course, and it was obvious that they train and compete on a consistent basis. I had planned on shooting a lot in general this year, especially ahead of this course, but those plans were derailed with the range shutdown.
3) Unlearning old habits is WAY harder than developing new habits. I had gone through significant transition in stance and body position for pistol shooting maybe 3-4 years ago with courses with SSG. For MSP, the change was the grip and presentation. I had watched his videos and had been putting time dry and live fire, but it wasn't "Jedi's kung fu". He mentioned that he wants you to take what he teaches and if it works, keep it and discard what doesn't work. Where he is also clear on his definition on defining and metrics on what works. Problems often arise when you mix his kung fu, with your kung fu. I definitely experienced that over the course of the 3 days.
4) Highs and lows. I shot pretty well day 1. That was all AIWB, but with a lot on Jedi's grip, dot acquisition, etc. Main thing was the grip. Jedi and the AI adjusted my grip slightly and noted my firing hand thumb occasionally causing issues. Almost everyone in the course encountered this to a certain extent, even the seasoned shooters and a few folks that had taken the course before. I left day 1 feeling pretty good overall and ready to tackle the black belt standards. Day 2 started well, but experienced some issues as we got into the focused sessions on refining accuracy. Long story short was my old grip started creeping back in. Jedi and the AI noted it here and there and I would adjust and get back on track, but two of the "three voices" that Jedi mentions were there. I was disgusted with how I shot in day 2. We ended earlier than scheduled, so I hit up a local range to work out some things. Noted the grip and ironed some things out. Day 3 started with lead up to the last of the performance challenges, which was a Bill drill at 7 yards. I shot well in the lead up and ended up winning the challenge. It was the toughest of the black belt courses of fire, which meant the prize was the best of the 5 challenges. I won my choice of the MSP pro series holster or a milled slide from C&H. I was super shocked when I received the Jedi chalice from one of the best shooters in the class, and was closest to meeting the black belt standards. I shot in the first third of the group, so I thought no way I keep the chalice, but my time and clean run ended up being best. It wasn't below the black belt standard time, but balance of speed and accuracy.
5) Take what works for you, and discard the rest. However, base your evaluations on metrics like timed speed and accuracy. Not what you “feel” works best. Be honest with your self-evaluation, both good and bad. There were definitely highs and lows for me during the course. Highs coming when I could clear my mind (“no mind”) and executed what was taught, and lows coming when I would get ahead of myself or old bad habits mixed in. The lows mostly happened when the timing or courses of fire got more intense/involved. Some help from the keen eyes of instructors and others in the class certainly helped along the way. I appreciate instructors that have “their way”, and while they want you to work their methods, they understand that everyone’s different and they find ways to make individuals better, no matter if it’s not exactly “their way”. Adding tools to the toolbox.
6) I took two newer pistols to this course. I had thought about taking a couple of older/tested pistols, but the pistols I took were what I am moving forward with. I had acquired them well ahead of the course and had planned to shoot them a lot more prior to the class, but the KHSC shutdown and “other factors” put a damper on those plans. I had maybe 500 rounds through one and maybe 200-300 on the other prior to the class. No problems with function, but there were a number of segments focused on accuracy, including finer points of trigger manipulation. It was good with the pistols that I had, but I think better to have done those sessions with pistols that I’ve had more time with.