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#1
PowWow / Re: Beating target panic
Last post by Rob DiStefano - Today at 09:58:01 PM
TP is purely a mental issue - the inability to properly release whilst properly aiming. 

Those who've never had this archery malady will never be able to understand it unless they experience this disease first hand.

The "cure" for TP might be a very Very VERY arduous undertaking because it's not a physical ailment, it's a mental affliction.




#2
PowWow / Re: Beating target panic
Last post by Kirkll - Today at 09:26:59 PM
I've seen this subject come up now and then for years, and never really could understand what this "Target Panic" really is. Could someone explain it? 

I battled my issues with inconsistencies due to improper alignment, and things dramatically improved learning proper back tension and learning to relax and let the release just happen, rather than consciously think about it.

 Shooting a blank bale with my eyes closed, and just concentrating on my breathing and the feel of the back tension did wonders for me. The follow though after the shot is just as important as the release itself too.  The release is only a point in the draw cycle that leads to conclusion and needs to be subconscious.  .

When I was helping beginners get their form and alignment tuned up I used to tell them to pretend that you have a string tied to your arrow from your shooting glove. After the release, you need to keep that bow on target and steer the arrow into the bulls eye  holding that string behind your ear. That little trick helped a lot of kids on follow though insight.

02 cents worth... Kirk
#3
PowWow / Re: Arrow for 35 lb hunting bo...
Last post by Phil Magistro - Today at 07:39:27 PM
Can you tell us what kind of longbow you're shooting?

I draw my 38# ASL just over 27". 1816s cut 28 1/2" with a 145 gr point are almost too stiff. Big Jim's 700 Dark Timbers cut 28 1/2" with a 145 gr point are about perfect. With cedars arrows cut 28 1/2" inches something close to a 40# spine with a 125 grain point shoot well.
#4
PowWow / Re: Dave Johnson! Great guy! ...
Last post by Gordon Jabben - Today at 06:43:50 PM
What a great story and thanks for reposting it.  Dave Johnson is what all archers should strive to be.  Hope he's doing well.  He sent me a post on one of the archery sites a year or two ago.  Hope he sees this!
#5
PowWow / Re: Glove
Last post by MnFn - Today at 06:37:32 PM
I guess I'd heard of it but never saw one before.
Pretty sure I could take one of any model they make and it would work for me.
#6
PowWow / Re: Arrow for 35 lb hunting bo...
Last post by Coach Jones - Today at 04:51:48 PM
1916 equal a 50-55 in a wood spine.  1816 equal a 40-45.  I couldn't imagine shooting a 1916 from a 35 lb bow with an average draw length.  I shoot a Kanati 38@28 that I draw 28 and I shoot 700 dark timbers with 225 up front cut 30 inches.  I vote 1816. 
#7
PowWow / Re: Glove
Last post by Flemish Twister - Today at 03:37:34 PM
Quote from: Flemish Twister on November 17, 2025, 10:14:05 AMSo this thread is perfect timing for me. I'm getting ready to call and order the Full Shot.  Anyone have experience with that style full glove?  Feedback?
Got my new Full Shot today and it is awesome! Fit is perfect. Ordered the medium, with a palm measurement of 7.25 inches. Finger stall depth is super too. Quality is pretty dang impressive. Now to the range for break in.
#8
PowWow / Re: Beating target panic
Last post by Arctic Hunter - Today at 11:24:03 AM
I bought Joel Turner's dvd several years ago. Going to a psycho trigger (feather touching my chin) helped me more than anything. Also, jay kidwell has some good drills and information in his book "Instinctive Archery Insights" on how to retrain your brain.
#9
PowWow / Re: Beating target panic
Last post by Rob DiStefano - Today at 10:09:43 AM
I'd beaten target panic perhaps twice in my lifetime of shooting that goes back to the mid 1950s. 

There was a time, a few years ago, when I just could not overcome TP.

I searched around the 'Net for help and found Joel Turner's website, signed up, and literally in less than an hour my TP was gone ... for good ... hasn't returned ... doubt it ever will.

So these are big words, but they're my words and my experience with learning to employ a "mechanoreceptive trigger" in my shot sequence that was the distraction that disconnected my brain thinking and allowed a push/pull release to naturally happen, whilst my actual aim remained the same as it always had been - focused solely on a pinpoint of the object I wanted my arrow to penetrate (aka "instinctive aiming").

#10
PowWow / Re: Beating target panic
Last post by McDave - Today at 09:26:48 AM
I like the idea of distractions brought up in the last two posts.  Sometimes when I have been distracted by something while nearing full draw, it has worked for me too.  One time I was teaching a class and mentioned Terry's idea that "archery happens from the waist up."  To demonstrate how people can shoot the bow effectively from a wheel chair, I braced my back on a nearby wall and squatted down to simulate being in a wheel chair.  I had only intended to draw the bow and let it down, but I felt so relaxed when I drew the bow that I went ahead and shot a good shot into the target.  I tried it again in another class and it didn't work as well, so I guess it wasn't enough of a distraction the second time around.  However! I do plan to try the blinking idea and partial let down ideas mentioned above.

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