I came to traditional from a target archery background, so I understood proper form, back tension, etc. The problem was that I started out with too heavy of a bow, and everyone I knew who got me into shooting recurves shot quickly. I was in rebellion from formal target archery anyway, so I wanted to cant, snatch it back, and let it go in the Asbell style (and I still love to read Asbell's stuff, have much respect for him). However, several years of struggling with too much weight and too little consistency prompted me to change. I now shoot almost upright, and I come to a positive anchor and pause for a bit before completing the shot, and I have improved my shooting quite a bit. I also dropped down over ten pounds in bow weight. The one bit of advice I would give is not to think in terms of holding at full draw. Back tension must be an active, positive act, not neutral, and should gradually increase till the shot goes off. If you think of holding, you will almost certainly creep and your release will not be clean. It's like shooting a back tension release on a compound: you come to positive anchor, aim, and increase back tension until the shot fires subconsciously. Holding is a misnomer for proper shooting form.