Assuming it wasn't the bow, you must have torqued the riser or the string, or both. You should have a very loose grip with your bow hand, so the handle can turn freely in your grip in response to any pressure on it. A good example of this is the rotational draw, where it is part of the plan that the handle will rotate in your grip as the bow is drawn. Even though you may not be using the rotational draw, you should hold the handle as loosely as you would if you were. On the string side, try to keep a little clockwise torque on the string as you draw the bow, to offset the natural tendency for a RH shooter to put counter clockwise torque on the string. By the time you get to full draw, hopefully it will even out and you won't have any torque in either direction. Check this by relaxing your bow hand at full draw and rotating your string hand slightly one way and then the other. The bow should react to these small inputs by rotating back and forth in response to the small forces of your string hand.
With your bow strung, put one end on the floor and the other end in your hand. Raise and lower the bow and sight along the string to verify that the string runs true from end to end and there is no limb twist. Reverse the ends and do the same thing.