Most people think grip is simple: hold the gun tight. That mindset is exactly why so many shooters struggle.

Grip isn’t one action. It’s a two-part mechanism—two different jobs happening at the same time, in two different hands, with two different types of pressure. If you treat them the same, your shooting will always fight you.

The Problem With “Grip Harder”

“Just grip it harder” is bad advice.

When both hands apply the same kind of pressure, you get:

-Trembling sights

-Inconsistent trigger press

-Low-left or erratic hits (for right-handed shooters)

-Slower follow-up shots

Because both hands are trying to do the same job—and neither is doing it well.

Think Banana vs. Apple

Imagine you’re holding:

A banana in one hand and an apple in the other. If you squeeze the banana like the apple, you crush it. If you hold the apple like the banana, you drop it.

Same hands. Different pressure. That’s grip.

Your Strong Hand = Control, Not Crush

Your dominant hand is your control hand. It:

-Maintains alignment

-Manages the trigger

-Keeps the sights stable

-Firm—but not crushing.

This is your banana hand.

Your Support Hand = Power and Stability

Your support hand is your clamp. It:

-Locks the gun in place

-Controls recoil

-Drives the gun back on target

-High pressure. Aggressive contact.

This is your apple hand.

The GRIP Standard

At GRIP Defensive Training, we don’t teach “hold it tighter.”

We teach intentional pressure.

Strong hand: control

Support hand: pressure

Two hands. Two roles. One system.

DRILLS: BUILDING A FUNCTIONAL GRIP

You don’t fix grip by thinking about it—you fix it by training it.

Drill 1: Pressure Isolation (Dry Fire)

Purpose: Teach each hand its job.

How to do it:

Present the firearm (unloaded, safe direction)

Grip with your dominant hand only — press the trigger

Add your support hand and increase ONLY its pressure

Keep your dominant hand relaxed

What to look for:

Sights should move less when support hand pressure increases

Trigger press should feel cleaner

If your sights start shaking, your strong hand is overworking.

Drill 2: 60/40 → 30/70 Transition

Purpose: Find your optimal pressure balance.

How to do it (live or dry fire):

Start with equal pressure (50/50)

Shift to 60% support hand

Then 70% support hand

What to look for:

Where does recoil track the straightest?

Where do your sights return fastest?

Most shooters realize quickly: more support-hand pressure = more control.

Drill 3: One Shot, Reset, Rebuild

Purpose: Reinforce proper grip every rep.

How to do it:

Fire one round

Come off the gun slightly

Rebuild your grip intentionally (banana/apple)

Fire again

What to look for:

Consistency in sight picture

Consistency in recoil

Don’t just shoot—rebuild the habit every rep.

Drill 4: Support Hand Crush

Purpose: Build recoil control where it actually matters.

How to do it:

Grip normally with both hands

Increase support-hand pressure as hard as you can

Keep your strong hand relaxed

Fire controlled pairs

What to look for:

Less muzzle rise

Faster return to target

If your shots start pulling off target, your strong hand is taking over again.

Drill 5: Failure Check (Reality Test)

Purpose: Expose bad habits under speed.

How to do it:

Run a controlled string (3–5 rounds) at moderate speed

Pay attention to where your shots land

Common signs of failure:

Low-left (right-handed shooters) = too much strong-hand input

Wide groups = inconsistent pressure

Your target tells you the truth.

Final Thought

If your grip feels like one uniform squeeze, it’s wrong.

Grip is not about strength—it’s about distribution.

Banana. Apple.

Control. Pressure.

Train it correctly—and the gun starts working with you, not against you.