The easiest solution to you problem is to train yourself to push up (in this case) on the safety lever every time you draw it to fire.
This is a good idea because it will make the gun go bang, no matter whether you left it in safe or fire.
Whether you intentionally put the gun on safe, or it just ended up there, any pistol that has a safe position should be treated like it is on safe when you need to fire. There is very little downside to pushing the safety lever to fire when it is already set to fire, but there is a downside to failing to operate the lever when it is set to safe.
If training to operate the safety lever every time you draw is inconvenient, don't carry a gun with a safety. That's why decock only guns exist. Some can be modified from one mode to the other.
Slide mounted decock safeties are great because they make loading and unloading the gun so safe. But they do require your awareness of where that lever is when you need the gun.
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