Hi Everyone,
I've been monitoring the Target Panic Reality Check thread started by Joel Turner and have been experimenting with my own mantra. I finally found something that works really well for me and wanted to share it here to see if anyone else has had success with something similar.
Consistent with Turner's ideal of letting the subconscious mind control the aiming portion of the shot and concentrating fully on the form elements of the shot and the pycho-trigger, here is what I do:
My mantra is "Anchor... Balance at Anchor...Push..."
When I say "Anchor" to myself, I focus on coming completely back to my repeatable anchor (middle finger in the corner of my mouth using split finger).
When I say " Balance at Anchor" I concentrate on maintaining the push/pull of my draw and most importantly, focus on making sure the bow is perfectly balanced in my bow arm. I try to impede as little influence on the bow as possible and imagine my drawing hand merely as a hook that holds back the bowstring while my bow arm balances the bow while pushing toward the target.
Here is where the breakthrough is: In the past, after I was satisfied that I was aiming completely on the target, I started focusing on rotating my shoulder back towards an imaginary person behind me. Similar to what is taught on Masters of the Bare Bow. For the past few weeks however, I added thinking about "breaking the bow apart" by pushing toward the target AT THE SAME TIME AS ROTATING MY SHOULDER. I noticed that when I started to do this (thinking about the pushing and pulling at release) the bow jumped forward from my arm, straight toward the target at release, and my draw arm flew back to a repeatable spot on my shoulder. My groups also improved dramatically.
I've given this some considerable thought. Here is what I think is happening. Im interested to hear everyone's opinion on it.
It seems reasonable to me that if a bow was pulled back by a machine, the same way, every time, perfectly balanced both while its being aimed and through release, the arrow will fly as true as the arrow construction allows it to. That is, if our form allows us to not "interfere" with the natural physics associated with loosing an arrow and we will have perfect arrow flight; all things being equal.
I've heard people talk about "letting the bow shoot itself" and not messing up the shot by introducing torque and movement by doing things like grabbing the bow handle at release, plucking the string, collapsing and dropping the bow arm etc.
For me, if the bow is perfectly balanced at anchor and stays that way through release by maintaining that balance through adequate push and pull; in this case achieved by concentrating on "breaking the bow apart" via the push/pull concentration, I get alot more accurate.
I've been shooting a recurve since I was 6 and this is the first time I can confidently say that I feel completely in control of my shot. Has anyone else experienced this or does anyone else employ a similar method?
As always, I value this forum and the feedback gathered from it.
Bill Hunter