some rambling about the target panic issue I'm having with #archery because talking through a thing helps you understand a thing.
human brains are cool and weird and have a habit of automating tasks and actions to the sub-concious... this is really useful for a ton of things and tends to be how we develop skills and talents... when we're able to offload complex actions from our conscious mind to our unconscious... reducing workload on repetitive actions to let us focus on active decisions.
for the most part? this is really beneficial but there are some downsides...
when it comes to physically demanding actions the brain will not only automate specific actions and decisions... but also try to optimise them... it takes some decisions out of our metaphorical hands and begins to take shortcuts in how we handle and process information and make decisions... this is often to protect us with rapid reactions to external stimuli... flinching or ducking something thrown at us for example.
where the downsides kick in, particularly for archery, is that this tendency to shortcut and anticipate can take important decisions away from us... that drive to automate can make it really hard to resist and control specific activities, particularly when that involves a physical response...
this, in my case at least, is the root of my target panic...
to cut a long story short my brain has linked aiming the arrow and releasing it into a single mental trigger and it's annoying as all heck...