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Author Topic: Does this sound familiar to anyone?  (Read 1131 times)

Offline Lee Lobbestael

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Does this sound familiar to anyone?
« on: August 22, 2017, 05:08:00 PM »
SO I have this shooting "cycle" I go through on a regular basis, that I would like to stop. It goes something like this: I shoot great for a period of time and than one day towards the end of a shooting session I make a bad shot. Well I can't end it on a bad shot so I shoot again and make another bad shot or at best a mediocre shot. So I spend the rest of the day out in the yard shooting shot after shot in a very fatigued state cementing in bad habits, because I refuse to quit on a bad note. Than I'll spend the next week or two trying different psychotriggers and slight form changes and shooting waaaay to much until I finally take a day or so off and end up back with the same trigger and form that I started with, shooting good again! :banghead:  'm at full draw for probably 4-5 seconds with a 50 pound bow so my shooting sessions really need to be fairly short. Hard to convince myself to quit with deer season a month away tho. Anyone else go through a similar cycle??

Offline Tradcat

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Re: Does this sound familiar to anyone?
« Reply #1 on: August 22, 2017, 06:05:00 PM »
Lee... You've been reading my mail. You described my typical shooting sessions to a T !

Online McDave

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Re: Does this sound familiar to anyone?
« Reply #2 on: August 22, 2017, 06:55:00 PM »
I would guess that you're unaware of the cause of the bad shot that starts the downward spiral, and then continue making the same error, either shot after shot, or often enough to drive you crazy.  You shoot a good shot and then shoot a bad shot, and they both feel the same.  You try to change something you think might be causing it, and it either doesn't help or makes things worse.

Here are examples of two things I worked through in my last session with Rick Welch.  He spent 5 seconds identifying these problems, and the rest of the two-day session making me aware of what I was doing and teaching me how to control it.  As a result of this, I was able to progress from hitting the animal somewhere most of the time to hitting 15 animals in a row in the 10 ring at unknown distances from 15-30 yards.

The problems he identified were picking up my head, and creeping.  After he identified these two problems, and shooting some more, it became clear that I could not tell if I was picking up my head or creeping.  After each shot, I would look at him and he would either shrug his right shoulder, indicating I had creeped, or raise up his head, indicating I had picked up my head, or tell me that the shot looked good, indicating that I had done neither.  I couldn't tell the difference.

The first clue was that if I missed to the right, I was probably creeping.  Then after many shots where he would tell me I had or had not creeped, I could begin to feel the loss of back tension when I creeped.  Then he taught me how to lock in my back tension so I wouldn't creep.  This last is specific to his method of shooting, and doesn't apply to a dynamic release, but everything else does.  I think he saved this for last because he wanted to see if I could control it on my own, or maybe because he knows people don't want to lock in back tension, because it feels weird, and they have to be convinced that it is necessary.

My clue on picking up my head was that my hand wasn't on my face after I released the arrow (another thing specific to Rick's method that wouldn't apply to a dynamic release).  My second clue was that I hit low.  I always thought that when I hit low it was because I was dropping my bow arm, and maybe I was some of the time.  But trying to not drop my bow arm when I was picking up my head is an example of applying the wrong solution to the problem.  I still can't tell when I pick up my head, but I know if my hand isn't on my face and I hit low that's probably what I did.  If I focus on keeping my head still on the next shot, then I won't pick it up.

Not that you have either of these two problems, but they are examples of problems one may have that one is not aware of.  It was helpful to have Rick identify them for me and help me solve them, but they would both have been evident on a video, assuming I knew how to recognize them.  I know how to now, but I'm not sure I would have been able to recognize them on my own before going through the session with Rick, because I wouldn't have been looking for them.
TGMM Family of the Bow

Technology....the knack of arranging the world so that we don't have to experience it.

Online McDave

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Re: Does this sound familiar to anyone?
« Reply #3 on: August 22, 2017, 07:24:00 PM »
Oh, and holding a hunting weight trad bow for 4-5 seconds is probably a bit much.  Rick teaches his students to hold for approx 2 seconds, which works well for me.  At least you can hold 4-5 seconds, so you must not have target panic!
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Offline Sam McMichael

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Re: Does this sound familiar to anyone?
« Reply #4 on: August 22, 2017, 07:50:00 PM »
I used to be that same way. I finally figured out that it was making me worse instead of better. Fatigue is the enemy of form and concentration. Now, when I start wandering all over the target, I simply quit shooting. Knowing when to quit is often one of the most difficult disciplines to acquire.
Sam

Offline Lee Lobbestael

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Re: Does this sound familiar to anyone?
« Reply #5 on: August 23, 2017, 05:12:00 AM »
You're right Sam, I need to quit as soon as I start to get tired. McDave, I use a psychotrigger and that is how long it takes for me to get through the trigger. Maybe 3 seconds, not really sure. I think I start making bad shots due purely to fatigue and not a specific form error. My arrows start wandering all over the place

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