I love your responses. As I'm reading I can't wait to reply. It is my belief that all aspects of form must be practiced to the extent that they do not require conscious thought. For my shooting, a true instinctive shot has 100% concentration on the target and none on any aspect of executing the shot. You said, "My attention is divided between focusing on the target and being aware of my back tension and other aspects of the shot". If we are referring to instinctive shooting, I don't think both can be done at the same time. I would separate "focusing on the target" from "being aware of back tension". That's why I've said it is impossible to practice form and try to hit a target at the same time. I agree with your statement, "Often though, it is only after I shoot that I am able to think back and reconstruct what was going on in my mind during the shot process, and become aware of when my thoughts led me astray." Of course that happens to me and I think it does to any instinctive archer. The moment I realize I was thinking about some deficiency in my form as I was trying to hit the target, I stop trying to hit the target and go back to form practice to correct the deficiency. Your mentioned "letting down" if you catch yourself thinking in words. I also try to do that and I think that is exactly what we should do. Getting back to the brain and how it works, I believe our "instincts" must reside in the right hemisphere, while speech it a left brain function. For me, an instinctive shot is "mindless". Of course I know the mind is involved, but not the cognitive side. I think of it as a Zen experience although I have never practiced that discipline and don't pretend to fully understand it. I actually believe our brains still have "instincts" that we are born with. We suppress them and are taught to suppress them from a very early age. 50,000 years ago, man must have been a much more instinctive creature and much less self contemplative. I don't think they aimed instinctively, I think they functioned purely instinctively. When I first started to try to shoot thrown targets, I was friends with Dale Marcy. He told me to start by trying to hit extremely small targets, not larger targets. And he said to imagine the arrow hitting the target just before my release. It worked for me and I use visualization in my shooting. I do see the arrow striking the target before it happens--if this is never-never land, then that's where I am. And now I have run out of "words" and I'm doing a poor job of trying to verbalize a mystical experience. When practicing, since I don't have the mental ability to shoot shot after shot, instinctively, I use the tricks I described to help get my focus 100% on the target for the shot. When hunting, the instincts that are hard-wired, kick in and I let myself embrace them completely.