Oscar
Member
Could you not attach a string from your toe to the trigger and stamp your foot?
After giving the correct lead of course.
After giving the correct lead of course.
If an entire Trap squad adopted this approach, it would resemble the front line of Riverdance !!Could you not attach a string from your toe to the trigger and stamp your foot?
After giving the correct lead of course.
For me its as Shootinguru says, always a second barrel issue and although recoil doesn't bother me as such it is obviously as a result of the first shot.Can be recoil related? change to 24 gramme shells for a couple of months see what happens>
Ha.....brilliant... :lol:If an entire Trap squad adopted this approach, it would resemble the front line of Riverdance !!
If you think that you have not been paying attention to what I have been saying on the subject.Seems to me that there is no solution/cure for this. And since this topic is common to about every shotgun forum and this is the severalth time it has occurred here there likely seems no new data either.
It would also be of interest , does anyone know of women suffering from the 'yips' in golf? Second question, it would be very interesting also if we knew there gender.As we are learning it has a lot to do with our thought process.Out of interest, does anyone know a woman shooter with trigger freeze? I've known some scared of recoil but not freeze itself.
This has got me thinking, even allowing for their far fewer numbers I have never heard/read or come across a woman with this problem. I don't pretend to know for sure but have always thought recoil and the fear of it is less of a factor than fear of missing. We know for example that release triggers can be hugely beneficial in getting around the problem but clearly the gun still goes off and produces recoil so surely the brain would still find a way to not release the trigger if recoil was a big factor ?If you think that you have not been paying attention to what I have been saying on the subject.
Trigger freeze is a mental problem usually based on fear of missing, brought on by missing in the past. To cure the freeze the sufferer will have to get around their brain and acknowledge that they have emotions attached to their shooting. The one massively brave man who came to see me for trigger freeze said he wanted a reduction of incidents to 3% of clays and that's about what he got in the long run. My work is person-centred : if he wants to do more work to address the final 3% he will, but I can't make him want to. Most shooters don't want to address trigger freeze because on some level the state of having the condition works for them. It's a lot easier to say you never made world champion because you had an unfortunate condition than it is to face up to the fact that, as you thought, you were never quite good enough.
I stand by my former claims: I guarantee my work. When I was offering to work for no charge I had just one enquiry. So Wonko, you're wrong. Most people don't want to be cured, and will take any excuse - too far, too costly, too time consuming, whatever - to stay where they are. It's not their fault, it's the nature of the human brain.
Out of interest, does anyone know a woman shooter with trigger freeze? I've known some scared of recoil but not freeze itself.
I agree with that Ian. The only time I get any problem is when I am tired and the target has got away from me a bit. It is almost as if my brain says you are not going to hit that and usually end up having a very delayed trigger pull as I fight to pull the trigger... thank god it happens very rarely!I do not believe it is recoil related I believe it is simply anxiety and or doubt about missing.
I defo have these two problems. The other two I am not aware of ... does not mean I don't have them subconsciously though !As with all issues, it is not a black and white problem and there are various issues causing people problems.
these include fear of missing, recoil related, visual problems, gun fit etc etc.
much like eye dominance there is not a blanket approach or a one size fits all, two people with a similar issue can have different causes and different solutions.
your last sentence seems to confirm my thoughts that it is not recoil related furthermore anyone who suffers the effects of recoil should get a gun that fits and or correct there gun mount. Modern cartridges are much softer generally than they were thirty years ago also comp guns seem much heavier therefore there really is no excuse to experience recoil at all.If you think that you have not been paying attention to what I have been saying on the subject.
Trigger freeze is a mental problem usually based on fear of missing, brought on by missing in the past. To cure the freeze the sufferer will have to get around their brain and acknowledge that they have emotions attached to their shooting. The one massively brave man who came to see me for trigger freeze said he wanted a reduction of incidents to 3% of clays and that's about what he got in the long run. My work is person-centred : if he wants to do more work to address the final 3% he will, but I can't make him want to. Most shooters don't want to address trigger freeze because on some level the state of having the condition works for them. It's a lot easier to say you never made world champion because you had an unfortunate condition than it is to face up to the fact that, as you thought, you were never quite good enough.
I stand by my former claims: I guarantee my work. When I was offering to work for no charge I had just one enquiry. So Wonko, you're wrong. Most people don't want to be cured, and will take any excuse - too far, too costly, too time consuming, whatever - to stay where they are. It's not their fault, it's the nature of the human brain.
Out of interest, does anyone know a woman shooter with trigger freeze? I've known some scared of recoil but not freeze itself.
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