If gun shaming were a thing, and I think it very well could be, then I'm experiencing it to a degree right now with my wife's family and not in the way one might immediately assume.
I'm largely indifferent on guns. I didn't grow up with them, didn't have them around the house, never went hunting and have never been in a situation where I felt I needed one. But, my family wasn't anti-gun or anything like that. We just didn't have them around. So, in my adulthood, I carry much the same opinion on them - if you have them, great. If you don't, great. Largely, I just want responsible laws surrounding them and I want gun owners to be incredibly responsible in how they protect/secure them.
My wife's family recently encouraged her to get her conceal carry and she did. They've casually tried to do the same to me but, after repeated displays of disinterest on my part, they backed off. But, I can sometimes feel a small tension in the air surrounding me when it gets brought up, almost like they want me to get it too but they don't want to come right out and say it. It's definitely one of those "it's not what's being said, but what's NOT being said" situations. They also tell my wife behind my back that I 'should really look into it' just because of the knowledge I'll gain, whether or not I want to physically conceal carry or not. There's probably some truth to that but, alas, we reach my general disinterest.
Has anybody else experienced this? I know gun owners take a lot of heat these days but it's been an odd experience to be on the other side of it as someone who doesn't really care about guns but is being subtly coerced into having one.