Here is something we all should train and practice for, weak hand shooting, I know personally I don’t do it like I should.
Weak hand shooting is something rarely practiced by most. Unfortunately, the skills are needed all too often. Find out why here.
www.ammoland.com
^ Yup.
The possible consequences of everyday-life really is the reason that drives my work of the non-dominant side. I'd written about this core belief of mine, before:
Over the decades instructor courses always drew moans and groans from students when the courses of fire required non-gun hand shooting. These exercises always seemed to bring a perverse sense of pleasure from instructors (myself included) when those "Aha" moments of diminished gun handling and...
www.thearmorylife.com
You asked for Springfield only, so I'm not going to tell you that MY EDC for yearround is a Sig P365.
www.thearmorylife.com
Having the necessary gear helps, too, of-course.
And this is worth a bit of extra time and investment in preparing, before one actually needs it.
I most embarrassingly broke my dominant wrist this past spring/summer while I was recovering from a broken ankle and leg that I suffered earlier-on in the year. The way my wrist and hand was immobilized (for 12 weeks), there was no way that I would be able to draw or operate my defensive handgun....
The 360PD in a PHLster City Special - boy was I glad I had those.
Y'all should have heard my wife yelling at me when she saw how purple and swollen my wrist/thumb was the next day. When I fell (I was actually trying to avoid bumping into her, irony of ironies!), she yelled at me "I know you broke your wrist! I'm a doctor, I know what kind of injury that mechanism causes!" I of-course stupidly insisted that I was fine, but the next day when my lab-mates saw how bad the wrist looked, they just shook their heads in dismay.
I was put on remote work after that...the boss had me on paper-research and writing, until I healed-up.