I've been shooting since I was 7, I'm now turning 44 and I learn something every time I go shooting. One of the reasons I still shoot is that there's no such thing as "finished" in shooting, there's always something new to pick up. Lately I've been shooting 3x5 recipe cards at 15 yards, next time I go I'll try 20 yards, etc. I like the idea of benching a pistol, and I'll give it a go - the more you learn about trigger pull the better. To the OP the difficulty of shooting a handgun stems at least in part from the trigger pull being heavier than the gun (not something you run into with any rifle, not the least benchrest guns), you may find that developing your skills with that Glock will make you a better bench shooter - that's the other great thing about shooting, it doesn't matter which discipline you shoot, you'll learn something that will help you later on, in a 'totally unrelated' discipline. I've always considered PPC to be, to borrow a term from the martial arts, Kata. Disciplined forms shot from varying positions with the goal of repeating each shot as perfectly as possible. IPSC and IDPA are closer to sparring (as close as we can get in most neighbourhoods) relying more on reactions, judgement and timing as you shoot the course. It's sad to see PPC's population dropping, I think any shooter can learn as much from PPC as they can from IDPA. After all, those Karate guys practise both side by side, and wouldn't leave Kata practise to spar exclusively.