Trad Talk Forums banner

If it ain't broken, break it!

Tags
break broken
1.7K views 6 replies 4 participants last post by  Martin Farrent  
#1 · (Edited)
Lots of archers blame "the mind" for screwing up shots. Others keep telling you not to mend what ain't broken. They like to leave their techniques well alone... especially aiming techniques.

I have a different take on that. I like the mind and think it's a powerful tool either God or evolution (depending on your beliefs) gave us for a purpose. I'm not very willing to limit that purpose just to save myself some tedium or because some guru tells me to go with the flow. Or because some other guru didn't put enough pages in his book.

As your hunting season in the US draws to an end, perhaps some people will find my ideas and recent experiences interesting. I'm still very much a developing archer, but so are many others here. And there's one thing I've noticed about the way our resident champions talk: Nearly all like to be on auto-pilot in competition. But none advocate mindless shooting on the practice range.

I think a technique that 'simply works' is fine for your immediate purposes, but if you can't pinpoint and understand its details, you're probably sitting on a time bomb. If it breaks at any time, you can't easily fix it. You may not even be able to diagnose it. It's like a car. It will fail at some stage... may that day be far off. And you will most probably lack the expertise to mend it when that happens. Unlike a car however, it doesn't lend itself to professional care. There's nowhere to take it when it stops working.

Periods when you don't need to be at the top of your shooting abilities are a good time to take things apart. Not necessarily things that are broken, but also things that work well - yet work without your full understanding. If there is something undefined in your shooting sequence, now may be a good time to pinpoint it and get a more explicit grasp on it. Then if it breaks at any time, you can restore it with little ado. You then have the plan and the parts... all you need is to put them together again.

I just spent two weeks dismantling one part of my aiming and sighting sequence (not my aiming system, just the way I implement it). After two days of that, I could hardly shoot anymore. I was spending more time retrieving arrows from the field behind my garden than loosing new ones. I really tried every variation and emphasis I could imagine. I subdivided steps and rearranged them countless times. I spent hours doing research on the Web or optical experiments without a bow.

Then I began to reconstruct things... carefully putting everything that made sense back into a defined sequence, one I could even write down (six or seven steps for something that takes a couple of seconds). It doesn't take very long to re-ingrain that kind of thing. And now, I'm shooting about the same as beforehand... perhaps a little more consistently, but only a tad so.

Not worth the trouble?

Perhaps not. If I were competing tomorrow and it were a good day, I'd probably do no better or worse than a few weeks ago.

BUT: I could now diagnose more mistakes than beforehand. And repair them at very short notice. If it were a bad day for me, I could probably make it work better than a bad day last month.

Best,

Martin
 
#2 ·
Martin,

I agree completely with this. You have done an excellent job of describing how to improve. This method applys to almost all endevors, not just archery.

Take one thing, understand it, develop it as best as possible, then move on to the next thing.

One point to add is that even though we have developped something to the best that it can be today, doesn't mean that it shouldn't be revisited later as other parts of our shot develop. For example, the sighting and aiming sequence you just worked out, may have room for improvement when you improve something else in your form.

Once we reach a reasonable level of competence in shooting a bow or anything else, improvements tend to be incremental & cumulative. So to answer your question - it definitely is worth it and if you continue to work on the parts of your shot sequence, you will eventually get there, where ever there is. :)

Good post,
Allen
 
#4 ·
I think regular and steady improvement is an interative process. And I think we are best served by always looking for the low hanging fruit. Release sucks? Work on it until it's adequate and then work on the next thing that sucks until it's adequate. After all the things that suck are brought up to adequacy, then you go back around refining them, bringing everything along one step at a time. One needn't take a disciplined or systematic approach to better shooting, but I think the alternative is a long, rough road that doesn't necessarily lead to a place we want to go.
 
#5 ·
Papabull said:
I think regular and steady improvement is an interative process. And I think we are best served by always looking for the low hanging fruit. Release sucks? Work on it until it's adequate and then work on the next thing that sucks until it's adequate. After all the things that suck are brought up to adequacy, then you go back around refining them, bringing everything along one step at a time.
Sure, mend what's broken first. But my idea was to diagnose the least understood parts of your technique, next... even if they're working tolerably. Best time to understand how a watch works is before it stops. Then you can a) mend it when it does, or b) possibly even make a better watch.

Best,

Martin
 
#6 ·
This would be where a good coach is invaluable in deteriming which approach is best for a specific archer at a specific stage of the archer's development.

The ability to know which approach to use is one of the most valuable coaching skills though certainly not the only one. Unfortunately, I think that very few coaches have a clue about this.

Good posts!
Allen
 
#7 ·
Allen said:
This would be where a good coach is invaluable in deteriming which approach is best for a specific archer at a specific stage of the archer's development.
Allen,

Rusty points out that coaches are a rare thing, and you rightly point out that a good coach is an even rarer thing.

Added to that, you need someone willing to spend time with a middle-aged gentleman shooting barebow - instead of promising youngsters doing standard FITA with sights... who, after all, constitute the main hope of any ambitious club. Or wheels, over on your side of the pond.

Best,

Martin