Hello all. I thought I would write this post in an attempt to help out those who experience target panic. If this helps a single archer, I would be very happy.
As a little bit of background, I am new to this website, but have been shooting a longbow for nearly twenty years. For I don't know how many years I have experienced moderate, but consistent, target panic. The problem for me was that I would never make it to my anchor (the corner of my mouth) while concentrating on a shot. I could never get it past the front part of my lips before I released. I tried a lot to concentrate and get it past that point, but it never worked. I still managed to shoot decently, in my opinion, but it was very frustrating to me that I could never anchor where I wanted, and that my draw length was shortened.
There is probably a lot written on this subject, but the root of this problem is purely mental, of course. So yesterday while shooting, I found a way that I could overcome this mental block 100 percent of the time, at least for now. And it has nothing to do with trying to touch the feather to your nose as a new anchor, or anything else like that that I've read. Those methods don't work for me.
The key to me is to NOT concentrate on the anchor. As I'm sure many can attest to, concentrating on the anchor itself is very ineffective. It's never consistently worked well for me. Instead, I concentrate my attention on the very tip of the elbow of the arm that draws the bow. All I do is concentrate on making that elbow point as far in the opposite direction of the target as possible, while expanding my shoulders... And the anchor falls perfectly in place! It just takes a different way of approaching the problem. It probably sounds pretty mental... BUT if you're suffering from this problem, you have something mental going on.
I hope this helps someone. Please let me know if it does. I don't know if this method has been discussed before. If it has, then I suppose this is just another affirmation of that method. If it hasn't, then maybe it can help someone out.
This is the first group I shot at thirty yards using this method, so it seems to be pretty good.
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Thanks for your time and I hope it helps. Feel free to leave feedback.