Dispatch:
Hey, My C2,C3, and C4 are blown with moderate stenosis & pinched nerves. C5-C7 are fused. L4-L5 also fused. I have a spinal neurostimulator added to the mix.
Are any of your shakes rhythmic or a pattern to them? I had mostly been shooting a S&W 459 9mm and my accuracy suffered in the past few years. I decided on a larger heavier gun combined with a technique that works for me.
I got a new Beretta 90-two. It has almost zero muzzle flip so follow-on shots are immediate.
Breath control, trigger squeeze, and closely watching the front sight during the shakes/quivers; When I see what looks like an anticipated shake coming I have at that time held my breath, squeezed off a round when the front sight was approaching my POA.
For me I have quivers (like fingers twitching but in my shoulder muscles) and more perceptible hand movement.
The heavier gun gave me more mass to hide or mask the shakes/tremors. Pistol target shooting had gotten frustrating before the larger gun. I love this new Dash because its weight/mass mask my movements or minimize them.
With the Smith shooting at 50 yards it truly was a hit or miss proposition shooting at the steel flip down targets. There are 3 target groups of 5 flippers each. The other day after shooting 7 and 15 yard targets I thought less see how I do at longer rangers. I was amazed. I blew down all 15 targets without an intervening miss, got all 15 with one mag!!
I was stunned. I hadn't shot like that in many years.
So for me, a heavier gun, and "anticipating muzzle movement" then squeezing the trigger worked. The only other change I incorporated was to use the 1st tip of my finger on the trigger versus sticking my finger almost through.
I am very happy. Please experiment with lighter/heavier guns and concentrating on catching the next spasm/twitch.
I am limited to 9mm as .40 and .45's hurt after a while.