Gun Owners Plan for Everything—Except This!

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I’ll be honest, this isn’t exactly the kind of topic that usually comes up around the range, in group chats, or over a couple beers after a long day.

Mental health plans don’t exactly scream “2A content.”

But after digging into some of the resources from Walk the Talk America, I started looking at it in a way that felt a lot more familiar, less like therapy talk, and more like something we already understand really well: preparation.

Because the truth is, we plan for just about everything else. (You know the saying, if you fail to plan, you plan to fail.)

We think through home defense scenarios in detail, we obsess over our EDC setups, and we spend a lot of time considering worst-case situations that may never actually happen. But when it comes to something that is statistically far more likely to impact us, most of us are just kind of… winging it.

So I decided to do something simple.

Table of contents

  • Taking the Test
  • Thinking About It Like We Already Do
  • My Plan (Or, At Least a Start)
  • Let’s Just Say the Quiet Part Out Loud
  • Final Thought
  • Resources

I took one of their anonymous screenings through Mental Health America, fully expecting it to either tell me something I didn’t want to hear or confirm what I already assumed.

The result? Minimal depression. Score: 0 out of 27.

Test results for depression.
My results after taking the online test. The key, of course, is to answer honestly. Personal transparency is everything when it comes to the effectiveness of this program. The test doesn’t take long. And it’s something we should do periodically (I’m sure my results would’ve been different after the Bills lost to the Broncos in OT).

In other words, nothing alarming, no red flags, no dramatic revelations, just a clean bill of health (though not an official diagnosis), which is exactly what you want.

But that’s also where this whole thing clicked for me. You don’t build a plan when everything is falling apart. You build it when things are stable, predictable, and, for lack of a better word, boring.

The same way you don’t wait until someone is kicking in your door to figure out where your rifle is or how you’re going to respond.

What I appreciated most about how Walk the Talk America approaches this is that they don’t frame it as intervention or crisis management. They frame it as prevention, which feels a lot more in line with how we already think.

The mental health plan worksheet (here) isn’t complicated, but it asks questions that most of us probably haven’t taken the time to answer, like who in your life would actually recognize that something is off before you do, who you trust enough to call you out on it, and what steps you’d take if you knew you weren’t operating at 100%.

And then there’s the part people tend to avoid talking about but probably shouldn’t. What’s the plan if things actually get bad? Not hypothetically. Not “that’ll never happen to me.” But realistically.

I didn’t overcomplicate it, because the goal here isn’t perfection. It’s having something in place.

I picked a couple people in my life who know me well enough to notice when I’m off, and more importantly, who aren’t afraid to say something about it, even if it’s uncomfortable.

I made a mental note of the basics that keep me steady (solid sleep, eating well, getting to the gym, being outside, staying connected) because if I’m honest, those are the first things that quietly disappear when life starts getting chaotic.

SEE ALSO: ‘Kids to Kings’ Brings Firearm Education to America’s Inner Cities

I’ll retake that screening every few months, not because I expect something to change overnight, but because it’s an easy way to keep a pulse on things without overthinking it.

And yeah, I also thought through what I’d do if I hit a rough stretch.

Not in a dramatic, worst-case scenario kind of way but in a practical, temporary, “let’s add some guardrails” kind of way, whether that means adjusting storage, looping in someone I trust, or just creating a little more distance until things level out.

Nothing permanent. Nothing forced. Just options.

This is usually where people in the 2A space get a little uneasy, because the second you start talking about mental health and firearms in the same sentence, it can feel like you’re opening the door to something else.

But this isn’t that. There’s no registry, no reporting, no outside involvement. This is entirely voluntary, entirely personal, and entirely up to you.

If anything, it’s the opposite of control. It’s ownership. And if we’re being honest, that’s kind of the whole point of everything we already do.

We like to think of ourselves as prepared people, and in a lot of ways, that’s true. But if we’re ignoring something that statistically poses a much greater risk than most of the scenarios we train for, then there’s probably a gap worth addressing.

I didn’t build this plan because something is wrong. I built it because someday, something might be and I’d rather have a simple, practical plan sitting there that I never need… than find myself wishing I had one when I do.

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Below are the resources if you want to build your own plan or take the test for yourself. As mentioned, it takes just a few minutes, and you might be surprised what you take away from it. If you do decide to move forward, drop a comment and let me know if you found it useful (or not). Or if it made you think about this stuff a little differently.

  • Mental Health Plan
  • Mental Health Test
  • Walk The Talk America Website

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