Letting down a shot should come from a recognition that something is not going as planned. It is this recognition that must be practiced. Make sure that you have an evaluation stage in your shot. If all is good, proceed with the shot. If not, let it down!!!! Letting down a shot you have planned not to shoot is like pressing a trigger on a gun you know is not loaded. If your subcon knows that shock will not come to the body, it shuts off the self preservation response. There will be no anxiety because there is no anticipated shock or recoil to the body.
I treat every shot as such: when I draw my bow, it is a shot I might shoot, it is a shot I might not, I will only shoot it if it is perfect. Letting down takes a thousand times more control than shooting a bad arrow. But if you let down because you recognized an imperfection, you get exponentially better at shot control. You need to build a mold for a perfect shot. When you shoot a perfect arrow, stop and analyze HOW you did that before grabbing another arrow. What was going through your head during that perfect shot? When you know HOW you shot that perfect arrow, it is much easier to replicate. Hence you build the mold for that perfect arrow. With every perfect arrow, you strengthen the mold and your mental recognition ( concentration ) skills. Call if you have questions. 253-686-3623
Joel Turner
IRONMIND ARCHERY SYSTEMS