Darkness Is Your Friend

by
posted on April 7, 2014
** When you buy products through the links on our site, we may earn a commission that supports NRA's mission to protect, preserve and defend the Second Amendment. **
patio.jpg

The military has a term for giving away your position by turning on your flashlight at the wrong moment-white-light AD (accidental discharge). For a lawful, gun-owning homeowner things are different, though. You need to positively identify a potential threat before your firearm comes into play. You also “own” any bullet you send, therefore due consideration must be given to anything downrange.

If the exterior of your house is like mine, lights deliberately go on at dusk. It’s a great criminal deterrent and done right it gives you a slight advantage when investigating those “bumps” in the night. Even my back patio has solar lights that come on at dusk, illuminating just about every corner, but something strange was going on earlier this week at 4 a.m.

Our Great Dane puppy had to go outside and his growling and barking began instantly. It wasn’t one of those distant warnings, either. It was “danger close.”

As you can see by the photo, if I have the carport light on my silhouette would make a lovely target through the door’s glass. Most opportunistic criminals would flee at the sight of a phone-wielding homeowner, but not all of them. So the interior lights were off as I scanned to determine if it was an animal or a two-legged predator that had him unnerved.

The same principle applies to other windows in the house. Do you really want a perpetrator to know exactly where your wife is sitting while watching late-night TV? I don’t. Draw the curtains and at least once a year walk around your house after sunset to see what is visible from the outside. Are the vehicles throwing shadows for hiding once your driveway lighting comes on? If you peek through the front window blinds is it obvious outside? Does your tactical flashlight escape window coverings?

Don’t get me wrong. A phone to dial 911, a self-defense gun, flashlight and training should be the front line of defense. But, if members of our Armed Forces are being taught to avoid position-printing white-light ADs, it’s something worthy of consideration by lawful citizens.

And don’t forget those organic motion sensors. In my case, a 101-pound “puppy” issued the initial alert, but it wasn’t until the springtime frogs silenced on my neighbor’s property that I spotted someone in his lights that morning. Light management is a serious subject, but it boils down to employing the common sense that could provide you a slight element of surprise if the unthinkable happens, and makes you and your family a harder target.

Latest

001 HP15CC W Cover 01
001 HP15CC W Cover 01

Review: Hi-Point HP-15 Carbine

In 2025, Hi-Point Firearms surprised the firearm community with the news that it would offer a complete line of HP-15 carbines and pistols. Since then, the company has expanded their offerings.

New for 2026: Springfield Armory Saint Victor .300 BLK 9.5” Pistol

Springfield Armory’s Saint Victor family now has a pistol in .300 BLK.

Preview: Lee Precision 7 mm Backcountry Reloading Dies

Lee Precision is now backing Federal’s 7 mm Backcountry cartridge with an all-inclusive kit, along with load data to reload once-fired Federal Premium cases.

Rimfire Resurgence Trend?

With suppressor sales booming, are shooters rediscovering their love of rimfire firearms?

New for 2026: Mossberg 990 Magpul and 990 SPX Aftershock

Mossberg steps up its 990 game with a new Magpul shotgun and SPX firearm.

New for 2026: Gemtech Nebula 5.7 Direct-Thread Suppressor

Gemtech’s Nebula is a 5.7x28 mm-specific sound suppressor.

Interests



Get the best of American Rifleman delivered to your inbox.