Well, put the sight on the bow, shooting at 20yds, and focus on nothing but aiming. Start every session by shooting with eyes closed, point blank, for about 30 minutes, executing perfect back tension releases. The trick is, when you start to see a target, you want to forget everything and make the shot go when you are on target! My coach was adamant about never letting a badly executed shot go; I would concentrate on aiming only, and the previously ingrained shot execution sequence would literally fire the bow by itself. If ever I thought about the release, or wondered if the shot was going to happen, I immediately let down and started the shot sequence again. Sometimes I would let down 10 or 15 times to shoot one shot. Once, in a tournament shoot-off for first, the wind was blowing about 30 miles an hour, and I let down at least 20 times before I finally shot! I made it a rule never to let a shot go off if anything but aiming ever crossed my mind. That's why you have to make the shot sequence execution become absolutely a subconcious thing: you can't focus on two things at once. You can either focus on aiming, or the shot execution, but not both. Eventually, of course, I shot at greater distances, but I always shot lots of point blank shots daily, with eyes closed, working only on using proper back tension to make the shot "happen." This doesn't apply so much to shooting recurves; I don't ever want to be that serious about anything again, because it became an obsession and the fun went out of it for me. But you can apply some of the techniques to improve your form and increase your enjoyment by shooting more accurately. If it stops being fun, go back to doing whatever makes it fun for you. Just my humble opinion, Paul.