Accepting the Muzzle in the Periphery
The overwhelming majority of what we perceive when
shooting a moving target occurs in the periphery. And things we perceive in the
periphery are really behind real time.
Remember, it takes the periphery almost 1/3 of a second to process and
understand what’s going on. By the time you’re aware of it, what you are aware
of in the periphery is old data. Your periphery cannot see sharply, and your
primary vision cannot see movement. Your retina is designed to see movement in
the periphery and direct your primary or sharp vision to the movement.
As shotgun shooters, we must train our brain through meaningful repetition and
deliberate practice to accept the muzzle in our periphery without directing our
primary vision to it when the muzzle enters into the shot ahead of the target.
This is why so many new shooters have so much trouble seeing the target past
the end of the muzzle. When they’re focused on the target, they see two barrels
in their periphery when there is only one. And if they focus on the barrel,
they see two targets but there is only one target. Add to this that the target
is 30 yards out there and the muzzle is 33 inches in front of their nose and it’s
impossible to get them both in focus.
Not understanding how all this puzzle is supposed to come together, they begin to struggle with trying to “not see the barrel!”
Finding it impossible to not see or “unsee” the barrel while focused on the target, they are sentenced to the “cross-eye dominance dungeon!” After running the gauntlet of Chapstick and frosted scotch tape to cover their non-shooting eye, we find all they really needed to do is help their brain understand what they wanted the sight picture to look like.
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