What
I've described it in this thread. Thinking a video is needed (or that "adjustments" aren't) demonstrates your lack of understanding.
pj
chgo
No, you have not. But I will certainly make a video contrasting the difference between the PJ Fidget method and the objective aiming methods.
By the way when you fidget aim what are the steps You come up to a shot and where are your eyes looking? Where is your body and your foot placement? How do you know that you are on the shot line?
When I come up to a shot I align my eyes to a line that connects the center of the cueball to the object ball. I then chose a secondary line that is connecting the edge of the cueball to one of three positions. I then decide which side to pivot from and then I go from standing to shooting position. At no point in that process did I guess or fidget. At that moment I do not actually KNOW that I am on the correct shot line but I am extremely confident that I am because of having learned the steps to a proficient enough level and seen that the application of those steps leads to the correct shot line. The whole process takes a few seconds most of the time.
It is OBJECTIVE and gives me the first result I need for the task of making the shot.
When you fidget hunting for the line that "looks" right do you think that this is better than simply following an objective method?
Now, you will say that it is IMPOSSIBLE to do the same thing and get a different result. We will leave the quantum nature of ever-changing variables out of it and assume that a human shooter can absolutely repeat the same steps for different CB/OB positions. You contend that there MUST be some adjustment made by the shooter that accounts for the "matching" (your term) of the shot angle WITH the center ball shot line required for that shot angle.
And if the shots are diagrammed in a 2d manner with the pool cue expected to be laid on the shot line I will agree with you. My point is that there is SOME variable present that allows for the shooter to complete the same OBJECTIVE steps and end up with their cue on the correct line without any conscious "matching" or "guessing" or "fidgeting" that is unknown for the 3d space in which the shooter is aligning to the cueball/object ball pairing using the objective reference points. When something WORKS then there MUST be a reason that it works.
And that reason COULD be some form of subconscious adjustment but WHERE in the OBJECTIVE process is that happening. That's what you cannot identify. The main point for me and the thousands of others who are successfully using objective aiming is that the process IS OBJECTIVE not subjective.
If you take any given shot and ask a proficient CTE user what the right perception/pivot is then they can tell you and if you know how to use CTE you can use that information to get to the correct shot line without any guessing at all.
But if you use the PJ Fidget Method then you can't tell another person how to aim the shot because the ONLY answer that can be given is feel it until you think it's right.
So, again, you don't know what the word OBJECTIVE means in the context of objective aiming systems. In the context of an aiming system OBJECTIVE means follow these directions without SUBJECTIVE feelings or guessing. It doesn't mean that there is not some place in the steps where the mind subconsciously goes "a smidge less here or little more there". It means that CONSCIOUSLY following the directions leads to a consistent and repeatable result.
When you fidget aim, as you do, then the only matching of the bridge placement is done ONLY through a conscious subjective application of FEELINGS. You literally move around UNTIL it FEELS right. The system aimer applies deliberate steps that use the visible parts of the ball to consciously let the system steps guide them into the correct alignment and subsequently be "matched" to the correct (but invisible) shot line.
Another way to say this is that a CTE user can literally AIM by remote control. All they need is a 2d diagram of the shot and a person who knows the system. Stan Shuffet could tell me the aim for any shot he sees through my body camera and I can strictly apply the perception and end up on the correct shot line. And he only needs a quick view of the shot to do this.
You could not do this for any other person. We could try it and I am confident that Stan aiming by remote control would result in more shots being successfully made in far less time than if you tried to direct the aim by remote control. If we did nothing else other than give the instructor/shooter pair 10 seconds to get into shooting position and verified the shot line with a laser it would be abundantly clear that the system produced an accurate result nearly every time and well within the ten seconds allotted. But you aren't interested in such testing because for you the word OBJECTIVE conjours up images of a 12 inch sex toy aimed right at your butthole IMO and causes you pucker up to the point of absurdity.
You are so stuck on the idea of subconscious adjustment that you have given yourself license to denigrate those who use and favor objective aiming methods for the past 27 years. And there are a handful of equally repugnant humans doing the same thing alongside of you. I wonder if you have any actual joy in your life other than waiting for me to come on here and use the word OBJECTIVE in conjunction with aiming?