Steve Swartz wrote:The problem with praising a perfect ten (either you yourself or someone else) is that particularly for newer shooters, the accidental ten (misaligned to left, jerk trigger right) shouldn't really be reinforced.
I suppose it depends on what your final goal is. If your goal is to learn how to perform rote tasks by programming the subconscious to follow a conscious built shot plan, then I agree with you.
If, on the other hand, your goal is to learn how to let your subconscious produce results for you, then I disagree.
If your goal is to learn how to fire the maximum number of tens, I think praising the tens will bring you success. If you tell your subconscious that you are unhappy with tens because you didn't like the way they appeared, you probably won't realize as many.
Who's to say that the misalignment of the sights wasn't done by the subconscious to compensate for a misapplied trigger that it recognized? Or even, vice versa?
Indeed, I think we should praise the realization of the results we seek, but we should also really understand what it is we ultimately want.
I think all the little technicalities will only take you so far, and might be great for someone starting out, but just as we have to let go of reading each letter, word, phrase, sentence to move to the "big picture," I think we must also let go of certain stepping stones on our shooting trail to reach higher levels.
If you can't let go of a particular rung on your ladder, how will you reach higher rungs?
Remember, I believe the best results come from making shooting tens a natural action. To achieve that, you must understand there is a subconscious interaction with the physical world and allow it to take place, instead of using the subconscious only as a playback mechanism for a consciously constructed program.
Pile it on. I have high shoulders...
Take Care,
Ed Hall
Air Force Shooting Homepage
Bullseye (and International) Competition Things