Hi! Great post and great responses. My husband has always done security on the side and became a police officer two years ago so we have always had guns in our home also. When I was pregnant and reading everything I worried that other families would not allow their children to play at our home because of the guns, but this never became an issue. When our daughter was younger (and before my husband became a police officer) she never knew we had guns. We had a gun safe in our garage and my husband put the gun on to go to work and took it off and placed it back in the safe.
Now that he is a police officer, he wears a gun 90% of the time and she is 8 now, so much more aware of it. He is very open with her and we have told her if she wants to see or hold the gun all she has to do is ask, he will unload it and supervise her and answer questions. We wanted to not have it be tabo so she would not seek it out without his supervision. When he is not wearing the gun it goes into a locked gun case on his bedside table. (being a police officer he wants it more accessable that in a gun safe)
Most of our daughter's friends know that her dad is a police officer because she is very proud of him and tells everyone! I can honestly say that NO one has ever asked about the guns in our home. Our close friends have always known but also know us and our priority at keeping our daughter and all children safe.
Our daughter was taught some gun safety at school, but it might have been prior to our move to VA. She was taught if she saw a gun she was to 1)Stop! 2) Runaway 3) Tell an adult. She still remembers this. I think another way to teach your children about gun safety is call to your local police department and ask if you could bring your children in to talk with a police officer about it. They wouldn't be able to hold a gun, but could see one. I also like the idea of going to a gun store.
Lastly, as your children get older, teach them that "toy guns" may look like real guns to law enforcement so to be very careful with them. Police officers are trained to secure a situation that is dangerous. They don't take the time to determine if a gun "is real or not" when it is pointed at them. There are toy guns that look real and can lead to very dangerous situations.
Thanks for letting me put my two cents in! Good luck!
D.