In sports, like basketball, athletes are said to "get in the zone", referring to an intense focus on all aspects of the game. I feel the same is true for the experienced hunter. We have to "slow down" and immerse ourselves in our surroundings. We have such fast-paced lives, "must be by X time", must "be to work at such and such time, meals, etc.
When we enter the woods, we have a difficult time adapting our busy schedule to an environment where there is no "hard and fast" time schedule. We have a tendency to try to force encounters with game, ON OUR SCHEDULE! It just doesn't work that way... at least not very often. It's one thing to stumble upon game, it happens, but not often, but a good hunter blends in, not just with camouflage, but with natures "schedule".
I love it when I get "in the zone". Squirrels scamper by and pay me no more attention than the turkey that feeds through the same stand of oaks. The novice hunter approaches hunting like every other pursuit in life, as if he is in total control of the outcome. Succumb to the natural world, immerse yourself in it, become one with it and see it like never before. Take the opportunities provided, and be thankful for it.