What do I say? It is a hard question. It has many facets, and the responses are great here, showing you the whole spectrum, S..
I totally support that you need to take a course on how to use and care for firearms. Even if you two decide not to get it, it will bring you closer to your husband, he will see that you care, an strive to understand.
With little boys in the house, the thing needs to be LOCKED AT ALL TIMES, it IS a tool, not a fun stuff. When kids see video games and movies with people shooting, and dying on the screen, many kids do not define exactly that death is a PERMANENT thing, and you cannot reload the game, to become alive or to heal the human being. They do not define between the tomato sauce color paint in the movies and the real blood, and what pain is involved for the human who is actually forced to shoot and for the one who is being shot. Hence, we have cases of little kids shooting somebody down... :(
This is a very serious matter, the psychological side, and kids need to be educated to understand what this thing is, why, and what it's all about.
Three situations from my life experience:
1.
when we lived in the wilderness in the mountains, we had a gun that was taken apart and stashed while at home, and put together when used for hunting. My boys at the age of 4 and 6 were not allowed to even say "a gun" - I am a huge peace-person. So, even while playing, kids did not name it, but referring, they said "that thing in the towels" :) because it was wrapped in the towel and far away from their reach. When they grew older, they were taught the proper use, care, and RESPECT for the weapon. They knew it as a weapon, not even just as a tool.
2.
We had a friend, a policeman. He had a handgun on his hip in the holster. After his work shift, he dropped in for a moment, for a cup of tea. While sitting on the couch, he suddenly felt like showing my hubby his gun as he just got a new one. so, he pulls it out. three kids in the room at the moment, all mine. he pulls it out, and while turning the gun, IT SHOOTS out a bullet. about 4 inches past my daughter's head, it swirled into the wall and buried itself there.
This is a WELL trained guy who knows how to use firearms better than many of us! My advice: if the gun is unlocked, there are NO KIDS in the room, no matter how experienced and careful we are. JUST IN CASE.
3.
Right now, my kids are 25,23,18. Now only the youngest, my daughter, lives with me.
I have a handgun in the house, cleaned, cared for, LOADED and within my close reach at all times. for protection. How come? If the restraining order does not stop my ex- from haunting me once in a while, then after the fact of him almost killing my daughter (medically proven fact), this is the extreme I feel to have a need for. It's a long story, but it has to be a real extreme to have such a thing going on... And heck yeah, if there will be a need, i will sure use it, too - God forbid for the need to ever come, but i know what I'm saying, too.
Otherwise yes, it has to be locked, away from bullets, and definitely far away from kids, even AFTER they start taking lessons on how to use it - that, ONLY under the strict supervision of adults.
Serious decision, you need to be aware of all the sides, and talk to your husband about it. Maybe even show him this page on our Mamasource site...
Make the decision with care, love and trust: do not confront your husband, making it a psychological war (!!!), but let him know you do not think that this is nonsense for him to have: he is a guy, they have different set of mind, meet his feelings, and decide together!
And, always HAPPYBE!!!