I have posted very little in six years. My opinion may bring the wrath of some--it is only one opinion that I have earned over a life time of doing this. THE LONGER YOU HOLD AT ANCHOR, THE MORE YOU ARE AIMING AS OPPOSED TO PURELY INSTINCTIVE SHOOTING. I do not play golf, but if you watch the great golfers of our time you will see ZERO hesitation at the pinnacle of the back swing. I have never seen much difference in the two actions. The golfer and the archer use one implement to drive an object forward. Putting is even more obvious because of the precision. If you are holding at anchor, you are thinking. If you think, you aim. Snap shooting gets some sort of bad rap. Is this not truly and purely instinctive? I AM NOT SAYING YOUR ARE WRONG FOR HOLDING LONGER AT FULL DRAW. I am saying that a person should not be discouraged for aiming, drawing,(or is drawing, aiming...hmm), anchoring, and releasing in one fluid, consistent motion without pausing to think about it. TRY THIS: SOME NIGHT WHEN THERE IS NO MOON SET UP A TARGET IN YOUR GARAGE. LIGHT A BIG EMERGENCY CANDLE AND SET IT IN FRONT OF THE TARGET. WALK OUT ON THE DRIVE WAY WITH A SINGLE ARROW AND SHOOT OUT THE FLAME AT 20 YARDS. SEE HOW LONG YOU WANT TO HOLD WHEN IT IS JUST YOU AND THE SMALLEST PARTICLE TO SHOOT AT--YOU CANNOT SEE THE BOW OR THE ARROW OR YOUR WIFE'S SUV. DO THIS AT MIDNIGHT SO IF YOU MISS, THE RACKET OF AN ARROW BOUNCING AROUND (gotta love a little pressure) THE GARAGE AWAKENS EVERYONE IN THE HOUSE. This topic is like religion, no one wants to hear there's is wrong. NOT SAYING THAT.