Thanks to all who replied.
Probably should've put more info in the original post. I can shoot to 43 yards in my backyard. I think for me the problem is two-fold. First, although I'm shooting a lot more at longer distance, in the past I didn't worry too much about it as I was primarily a hunter. I think there is something to the "comfort zone" theory, although I haven't been able to increase that zone as rapidly as I would've thought.
Second, and more to the heart of the matter for this thread, is a confidence issue and I wanted to see if others would post on that topic before I mentioned it.
For me, I KNOW I'm going to hit what I'm aiming at, at 22 yards or less. I don't hope for good results, I expect them. Again, I guess this defines "comfort zone", but I can't seem to increase the zone by merely shooting lots of arrows at 30, and 40 yards.
Outside of 22 yards I'm still in the hope range. Hasn't bothered me that much in the past because as I said, I generally don't take hunting shots that far away. Anymore, though, I'm enjoying shooting my bow as much as I enjoy hunting and I want to improve. Although I do practice at longer ranges, I'm not shooting as well as I think I should.
I know the two go hand-in-hand, but what comes first? better shooting? or confidence? And, what's the solution? Keep shooting more arrows at longer distances knowing it will pay off in time?
Stan