Hard to say without seeing your form at full draw. For me (and most of my students) I teach placing the "C" of your drawing hand on the back of your jaw (where it turns up towards your ear), my index finger in the corner of the mouth (split finger); "release tips" video. That puts the string right through the center of the pupil of the eye. Your facial shape will have something to do with this and the flatness of your string hand at full draw and how the hook is formed.
If you look at your self in the mirror, the corner of your mouth is pretty much right below your eye on that side. So if that is where you are anchoring, the string should be in front of your eye. If you are pulling back farther than that on the side of your face, the string MUST be to the right of the eye (right handed shooter) and that will/can cause left misses, which is where we started this conversation. I see some self taught Trad shooters that have their draw clear back to their ear which does lots of bad things to their form, strength and accuracy.
On the other hand, if, somehow, you are getting your finger clear over to your nose, the string will be to the left of your eye causing a problem in the other direction. I personally cannot visualize my finger clear over on my nose to get the string in front of my eye.
Again, facial construction is different for each person. If you are one that cannot get the "blurry blob" of a string, that would lead me to suggest a slight cant to get the nock end of the arrow directly under the eye. That cant would be due to a slight bend from the waist to tilt your head over the arrow, not just twisting a cant in by use of the bow hand and string hand.
Can you post a video of your position at full draw with the camera out in front of you? To the right if you are right handed.