Mr Pannone
Scanning and asessing (or whatever you like to call it) is always a hot topic. My question to you is: How do you prevent it from becoming just something you do thoughtlessly after shooting to actually checking you work through the sights and then scanning and assesing and really seeing, not just looking around you. On the range you see people do all kinds of strange “range kata” stuff just because it looks cool. Or is this whole thing overrated and not something you actually need to train? Do you have tips for setting up drills on a flat range to practice this in a proper fashion?