Posted 06 July 2009 - 02:22 PM
24 May 2008
After a long time away from this journal, I'm back. I've been extremely frustrated by the failure of my shooting skills to go where I want them. I've been dry firing my ass off, practice, practice, practice.
I think my problem has been, as Tim Bacus put it, "A lot of people will not change their basic technique, they think, 'I just need to keep doing what I'm doing; I just need to do it better.'" So they'll keep pounding their head against a brick wall, practicing the same techniques that just don't work very well, over and over again.
As I used to tell Gina, "If you just keep shooting the same way....you're just going to keep shooting the same way."
I think one problem is that, after years of trying it, I have to accept that the "changing my focus from sights to target and back again" thing is just not something my eyesight will allow me to do. Okay fine.
I think back on the fastest, most accurate shooting I've ever done, that one match with the Nowlin Action Elite 9mm, and I realize that, as with my best performances on plates, my eyesight was very relaxed, I did not have a strong front sight focus, I could see the front sight, rear sight, and the target all at once.
I am firmly convinced that most people - including me - who have been shooting, or whatever their sport may be, for a significant amount of time, actually have a much higher skill level than they realize or can regularly manifest. The key, I think, is to relax, get my ego out of the way, and turn the shooting over to the subconscious mind.
Thought After Practice Session
I think I've been making a basic mistake with my training, only going as fast as I felt in control. I've noticed that if I push the speed, accuracy increases as well.
Need to move at a speed at which the conscious mind cannot function. Thus the subconscious mind must take over.
The only way to become a good, fast shooter is to spend a lot of time shooting fast.
**Do NOT "slow down and get the hits." Stay fast and become more accurate.**
Work on trigger control and gun manipulation in dry fire, so that in live fire I can forget it and shoot fast.
On long shots, prep the trigger. Especially important on transitions.
Commit to the shot, begin pulling the trigger before the gun gets to the target, spend the last few microseconds cleaning up the sight picture as the gun arrives.
If I just have trust in myself, and my technique, and watch the sights, the gun naturally comes back to the same spot with no effort on my part. Smooth trigger pulls let that happen.
In training, shoot fast, your mind becomes used to shooting at that speed, and it becomes easy. Shoot slow in training, you'll never be fast and accurate.
Robbie Leatham: "I can teach myself to be accurate, and when I do, you won't be fast enough to catch me."
Eyesight does not exist to control the gun but only to note how well your technique is working, and how well the gun in behaving. Trust yourself, let the speed flow. Like sand through your fingers, like water down a hill. Like quicksilver.
Pride and fear are emotions, which hope for an outcome. Outcomes take your attention from the present, where the shooting happens, to the future. It is totally impossible to do anything in the future, because it hasn't happened yet. The key to shooting your best is to be present as the witness of the shooting. Do not judge, do not give yourself anything to live up to. We can only shoot as well as we have trained ourselves to shoot. To try to shoot only induces stress. Be content with your current ability. And accumulate practice to improve that ability. Consolidate, build strength where you feel weakness. We cannot raise our ability until we accept our current limitations. Practice dissolves limitations. Matches simply define where the current limits exist. The game of shooting is all about redefining our limits.
- Sam
Amateurs do it til they get it right. Professionals do it til they can't get it wrong.
"It's not the will to win that matters - everyone has that. It's the will to prepare to win that matters."
- Paul "Bear" Bryant
"The only reason why Everest is the highest mountain ever climbed is because it's the highest. If there was one higher, I bet there'd be people trying to climb it."
- Jack Barnes