Thanks Patrick for your reply, I appreciate your civility, I certainly would be open to a discussion off-line, especially once I get more time under my belt to further ascertain my understanding of the system. I'm actually doing as you said, enjoying the ride, and if the ride doesn't end then all the better, for me at least.
I can say that my execution of the system is different than I pictured before starting this weeks ago. I thought it would be much more mechanical with the pivoting and everything, and that if I didn't do this or that correctly then I would miss the shot. However, in practice I find that trying to judge the 1/4 ball positions easier than I envisioned, I don't feel like I have to be 100% exact (but pretty close), I'm not spending an unusual amount of time worrying about which eye is looking at what, where to place my bridge hand, bridge distances, etc. It just sort of happened after spending a few hours working with the reference shots and doing everything very mechanically, now it just happens naturally.
I know that may give credibility to the argument that the system is visual or feel based, but even so I feel very locked in on shots, more so than ever before, and I'm legimately surprised when I miss anything other than a very long difficult shot. When I do miss, I just seem to know why better than I did before - my stroke was poor, my visuals didn't feel right but I shot anyway, or I wasn't sure of the shot and just got down and "guessed". I've also made a ton of shots where I pick up on the visual lines and then as I'm getting down on the shot I never look up at the object ball or pocket again, just pivot into center ball on the way down and hit the cue ball and the object ball goes in. I can't explain this away by feel, at least not at the moment, which makes me still think there's something legitimate to the CTE alignment that makes it resolve to the actual aim line in a structured manner.
As to the system itself, I would agree that with any pivot-based system the system must somehow get your body and bridge position set properly so that when you pivot your bridge hand is already on the correct shot line and pivoting just brings the cue into that same alignment. As one person said that I briefly showed this to, why would you want to set up in one position and pivot into the correct line when you can just set up there in the first place? I would concur, however for me when I played before I didn't always know or have confidence that I was setup correctly for the shot, which sometimes led to steering of the cue, flinching, etc. This happened sometimes even on what most players would consider fairly easy shots. Of course when I was playing well it didn't happen as often, but it happened. Now I guess I feel like I have a more regimented approach to each shot, and once I get lined up my eyes are just giving me that feedback that I'm lined up perfectly and just make a good stroke and the ball goes in.
I wish I had a table at home to really work with this that I could mark up the table or balls, get good video and superimpose lines, etc., but if no one else is successful in a possible explanation how this system resolves to the GB line maybe I'll try something in the next couple of weeks.
Scott
I can say that my execution of the system is different than I pictured before starting this weeks ago. I thought it would be much more mechanical with the pivoting and everything, and that if I didn't do this or that correctly then I would miss the shot. However, in practice I find that trying to judge the 1/4 ball positions easier than I envisioned, I don't feel like I have to be 100% exact (but pretty close), I'm not spending an unusual amount of time worrying about which eye is looking at what, where to place my bridge hand, bridge distances, etc. It just sort of happened after spending a few hours working with the reference shots and doing everything very mechanically, now it just happens naturally.
I know that may give credibility to the argument that the system is visual or feel based, but even so I feel very locked in on shots, more so than ever before, and I'm legimately surprised when I miss anything other than a very long difficult shot. When I do miss, I just seem to know why better than I did before - my stroke was poor, my visuals didn't feel right but I shot anyway, or I wasn't sure of the shot and just got down and "guessed". I've also made a ton of shots where I pick up on the visual lines and then as I'm getting down on the shot I never look up at the object ball or pocket again, just pivot into center ball on the way down and hit the cue ball and the object ball goes in. I can't explain this away by feel, at least not at the moment, which makes me still think there's something legitimate to the CTE alignment that makes it resolve to the actual aim line in a structured manner.
As to the system itself, I would agree that with any pivot-based system the system must somehow get your body and bridge position set properly so that when you pivot your bridge hand is already on the correct shot line and pivoting just brings the cue into that same alignment. As one person said that I briefly showed this to, why would you want to set up in one position and pivot into the correct line when you can just set up there in the first place? I would concur, however for me when I played before I didn't always know or have confidence that I was setup correctly for the shot, which sometimes led to steering of the cue, flinching, etc. This happened sometimes even on what most players would consider fairly easy shots. Of course when I was playing well it didn't happen as often, but it happened. Now I guess I feel like I have a more regimented approach to each shot, and once I get lined up my eyes are just giving me that feedback that I'm lined up perfectly and just make a good stroke and the ball goes in.
I wish I had a table at home to really work with this that I could mark up the table or balls, get good video and superimpose lines, etc., but if no one else is successful in a possible explanation how this system resolves to the GB line maybe I'll try something in the next couple of weeks.
Scott