Hey Rick,
I tried to go completely lining up shots with my right eye, but my brain get going back to a blended image. I just make sure on my shots that are thinner cuts that I "let" my left eye in on the sighting.
Some nights it's easy, other nights I have to focus to do it. Like LAMas said, I have to blink/close my left eye or right eye to get a picture going that I can acknowledge. The mind is really tenacious when it wants to do something.
I tell students in sparring class that are having trouble hitting targets with kicks or punches to think briefly of their target long before they engage. When the opportunity comes, they'll automatically hit their target with speed and accuracy, instead of hitting wherever their strike happens to land.
In pool, my psr starts with getting my dominant eye in the best possible position to see the shot. If I'm cutting a thinner cut to the left, I think about letting my left eye into the visualization.
That's also why the stick aiming system works. You use both eyes equally and the dominant eye has to allow this setup. Players that like to use one eye for most of their aiming or never considered using their passive eye don't pick up the idea very easily. When you align, the final setup is exactly the same as Geno's Perfect Aim finish, which validates his findings.
Best,
Mike
Yeah Mike,
The connection of our sight to our mind is amazing. But we sometimes consciously send the wrong messages.
In golf there's one palm tree that you do not want to hit so you look at it & guess what you hit, The same thing with an over hanging branch.
Best 2 Ya,
Rick