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Competition, Tactics & Training
Shooting Chat
Training to Use NON-Dominant Eye
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<blockquote data-quote="NightShade" data-source="post: 2891207" data-attributes="member: 29706"><p>I know of a couple ways to force eye dominance. You can squint your left eye slightly or place a piece of semitransparent tape on a pair of sunglasses or regular glasses on the upper half of the lens or just wear an eye patch on your left eye while awake for a week or two. Then it's practice, practice, practice. You may have to continue doing things from time to time to keep the dominance to stay but it should only be needed every so often if you notice a shift back to your left eye for dominance. You may still have to squint at times if you use that method or the tape method but the patch should be able to force the shift to last much longer.</p><p></p><p>The major gain that I can think of is better shooting capability if you ever have an eye injury. It's a good way to be able to stay up and shooting and still be accurate. Never know what may happen that will not be a permanent injury but cause vision problems in one eye.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="NightShade, post: 2891207, member: 29706"] I know of a couple ways to force eye dominance. You can squint your left eye slightly or place a piece of semitransparent tape on a pair of sunglasses or regular glasses on the upper half of the lens or just wear an eye patch on your left eye while awake for a week or two. Then it's practice, practice, practice. You may have to continue doing things from time to time to keep the dominance to stay but it should only be needed every so often if you notice a shift back to your left eye for dominance. You may still have to squint at times if you use that method or the tape method but the patch should be able to force the shift to last much longer. The major gain that I can think of is better shooting capability if you ever have an eye injury. It's a good way to be able to stay up and shooting and still be accurate. Never know what may happen that will not be a permanent injury but cause vision problems in one eye. [/QUOTE]
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