Cross eye dominance - my experience (should I shoot wrong handed?)

schwaf

Lil-Rokslider
Joined
May 9, 2019
Messages
175
I posted this on AT, but feel this warrants a topic here. There is a lot of debate on this topic, and when I researched years ago I couldn't find enough information to confidently switch to using my weak hand/dominate eye. I wanted to post my experience and conclusion for anyone looking for a deep dive exploration. Here's the tl;dr - use your dominate eye. Your dominate hand does not matter. You will get used to using your "weak" hand very quickly with training and it will feel natural with time. Your weak eye is the real handicap, and it's substantial.

--
Here's the long winded experience and explanation, and what you may expect to experience if you also decide to switch. I am right handed and left eye dominate. I have, through this process, become fairly ambidextrous as someone who did not start off very coordinated with my left hand (and so can you). I shoot pistols right handed, aligned with my left eye. Never felt great shooting rifles. When I started archery, I bought a beginner righty bow with basic accessories and good arrows and shot it obsessively for about 3 years. The bow was tuned, balanced, accurate, and I did not feel like my gear was holding me back hunting 40 yards or under, 50 was my target max. Nothing fancy, the brand doesn't matter, it worked fine and I had no complaints.

I made a conscious decision to not change or upgrade my set up until I learned to shoot properly. I did not have the skill or experience to know what I like and dislike and what my gear preferences are, so I just shot my bow until I hit my personal limitations (good gear makes a difference, but not as much as good technique and fundamentals). Eventually I felt like I could shoot out to 50 somewhat accurately (8" group), and within the 8 ring at 20 yards about 80% of the time. Not great, mind you, but for a beginner I thought it was ok. Deer/Elk/small game hunted since year 1 with clearly defined ethical limits. I shot at TAC Colorado for the first time around year 3.

TAC is an event that really shows your personal and gear limitations. It is completely different than shooting at a level target at set ranges and consistent lighting. I quickly found what it was about my set up that I strongly disliked and held me back, but what I really found was how much shooting with my non-dominate eye was a massive handicap. I can train my brain to a limited degree to focus with my right eye at will, it becomes increasingly harder and takes more mental bandwidth the more fatigue and dehydration sets in. The brain defaults to the path of least resistance. I had to squint, close my left eye, deal with shadows, changing light, depth perception, small limbs and twigs, and everything else. Every shot took longer to settle in, find my target, and focus my eyes. Towards the end of day 2, my eyes could barely focus.

I left that event with a clear understanding of what gear I wanted to upgrade to, starting with a completely new platform. I had to decide whether I was going to stay right handed, or switch to favor my dominate left eye. Like you reading this, you'll probably get the idea that you should switch to dominate eye, but you somehow think your "weak" hand is an awkward handicap and you can force your brain to do what you want. I tried wearing an eyepatch on my left eye for a week. Smear vasoline on the left lens of my glasses. Focus everything I looked at with my right eye. All hopes to reprogram my dominate eye. Yeah, doesn't work. You can't reprogram your brain with a couple weeks of effort when it has been programmed your entire life to favor a certain side. It will always revert back.
 
Here's what I found after switching to my cross dominate eye bow and my advice to you. Within a month of consistent practice, my distance and accuracy doubled. I won't deny that my new set up contributed to that, but without doubt the most important change was using my dominate eye as well as dialing in my shot process. I had to pull much weaker poundage and slowly crank it up. Now is not the time to have an ego - set it at a weight that is easy to pull without breaking form. You are relearning from the beginning, but the effort is well worth it. The first 10 shots were extremely awkward, and by shot 30 it felt like my brain was breaking. If you experience that too, I think it's natural. Your brain is forming completely new neural-pathways and synapses, and strengthening with every repetition. This is a critical time that you dial in your draw, form, technique, and release perfectly. Don't worry about being accurate - shoot at a target 10 feet from you. You are literally programming new muscle memory and habits, and you do not want to program yourself with flaws from the beginning. You will tire out quickly. Your muscles and mind are not used to this strain. Allow yourself a day or two of rest, come back, shoot 5-10 arrows a session and make every shot count with chasing perfect form and release, then walk away to let your mind and body process it. By shot 50-100, you'll start to catch up. By shot 200, it will feel completely natural and more accurate if you've allowed yourself the time and discipline to do it right. Dial in your pins for accuracy after you can pull your max poundage with good form for a full session. Long sessions won't feel as cumbersome or fatiguing, and you will be amazed with how much better it is to shoot with your dominate eye.

Within a month my distance and accuracy doubled. I very confidently shoot out to where my vertical pins max out (around 90 yards), but if I set it up to shoot further, I know I can. I settle into my shots and acquire my targets in less than half the time it used to take me. The process of grabbing an arrow, nocking it, draw, tension, and release is natural and automatic with training. It does not require surgical precision and dexterity, so being slightly less coordinated is not an issue. You are not training your weak hand, per se, but just the other side of your body to do big motions repeatedly. I have to use my left hand a little more in the woods because my right hand is carrying the bow, but you get used to it quickly and I've become fairly ambidextrous just getting past the initial awkwardness. If a dog can learn to walk with 3 legs, you can learn to use your other hand a little better. The real handicap is just your mind.
 
Dave Sevigny was the USPSA production champion for a few years. He was cross eye dominant. He just held the gun up to his dominant eye and used his dominant hand. I think this would be way easier than switching hands.
 
This is spam. He’s blasted this on several sites within minutes.
I posted this on AT, and decided to bring the thread here as well because I feel it's a topic worth discussion. I'm not posting this in multiple sections of the same forum.
 
Dave Sevigny was the USPSA production champion for a few years. He was cross eye dominant. He just held the gun up to his dominant eye and used his dominant hand. I think this would be way easier than switching hands.
I do the same shooting pistols and don't feel the need to switch hands. Archery and rifles are different due to how your head rests and aligns with the string/stock. My point is that in shooting sports, which eye you aim with is more important than which finger pulls the trigger.
 
My wife is right handed left eye dominant. I sure am glad that I am not. I think what you do depends a bit on what you want to do.

For wing shooting you basically have to go with eye dominance to be remotely competent. And given I think it would be real hard to switch back and forth between different types of shooting I would swap to lefty if that is part of what you want to do.

I would think a bow would be 2nd most important to switch though perhaps shooting one eye closed gets you close enough. My wife used to shoot right handed sighting with her left eye. She got plenty competent within 30 yards but it fell apart quickly after.

Shooting a scoped rifle and keeping the off eye closed is not the end of the world so likely does not matter much.

I dont really know on hand gun. It seems like potentially the one kind of shooting that what hand does what actually matters a bit more and also maybe the easiest to use right hand and left eye. I really have no clue though.

If I had a kid I would always get them shooting based on eye dominance not had, every time no matter what. Same with an inexperienced adult or one who was going to go through a training program and make/break habbits anyway.

For an adult who had done it one way for years and was successful thats a harder decision.
 
I was caught at a very young age, throwing up my Red Ryder to my right shoulder and using my left eye to aim.

Dad had me do some stuff with my thumb and closing each eye which I can never remember and told me I was a lefty now.

I've shot left handed my whole life. Rifle, shotgun and archery. Pistols are a little different.

I've caught several young people doing the same things, bow or rifle, and helped them make their first hits on target.

Switch to dominant eye. It's just easier all around.
 
Here's the tl;dr - use your dominate eye. Your dominate hand does not matter. You will get used to using your "weak" hand very quickly with training and it will feel natural with time. Your weak eye is the real handicap, and it's substantial.

100% Agreed!
 
My wife is right handed left eye dominant. I sure am glad that I am not. I think what you do depends a bit on what you want to do.

For wing shooting you basically have to go with eye dominance to be remotely competent. And given I think it would be real hard to switch back and forth between different types of shooting I would swap to lefty if that is part of what you want to do.

I would think a bow would be 2nd most important to switch though perhaps shooting one eye closed gets you close enough. My wife used to shoot right handed sighting with her left eye. She got plenty competent within 30 yards but it fell apart quickly after.

Shooting a scoped rifle and keeping the off eye closed is not the end of the world so likely does not matter much.

I dont really know on hand gun. It seems like potentially the one kind of shooting that what hand does what actually matters a bit more and also maybe the easiest to use right hand and left eye. I really have no clue though.

If I had a kid I would always get them shooting based on eye dominance not had, every time no matter what. Same with an inexperienced adult or one who was going to go through a training program and make/break habbits anyway.

For an adult who had done it one way for years and was successful thats a harder decision.
I agree with everything here. I struggled for years with wing/clays because I couldn't acquire the target fast enough. Completely changed once I switched.

My experience was the same as hers shooting my bow. Close targets were not an issue, but the further out it fell apart. It gets exponentially worse with fatigue and less optimal conditions.

A rifle matters less, but target acquisition is slower in my experience. I think that could be trained and become less of an issue, but I also think switching hands would take the least amount of effort to learn.

Pistols require more coordination and dexterity and is more about speed than precision. Your hands and head are not in a fixed position with one side of your face positioned against a string/stock, I think ideally one would learn to shoot equally with both hands.

I'm glad I switched when I did, rather than 20 years later and deciding there was no point. I'm not going to lie, it was difficult and frustrating in the beginning and I nearly dropped archery all together. Glad I pushed through the process. The only bummer is lack of gear in circulation. I feel very sad for left handed people. If I was left handed and cross eyed, I would be elated getting access to all the right handed gear out there.
 
I am left-handed, right eyed. Learned to shoot with Dad's right-handed rifles as a kid in the 60's, btw '06 and 270 Win. Can shoot handguns ambidextrously. When I got a bow, purchased a right- handed bow, no problem. Shot a buck one time with my AR 450 Bushmaster because that is what the situation dictated. Definitely utilize your dominant eye, things will go faster and be easier.
 
I shoot with both eyes open. Over the years I found that for some reason, near the end of goose season my dominant eye would change and that would change my lead. I was deadly on right to left and behind on the other.

I would have to focus on my right eye for a while to get things right.
 
I'm right handed, left eye dominant, with a pistol and rifle I shoot both eyes open, with a bow and shotgun, I close my left eye. With a pistol and rifle (AR specifically) I can shoot ambidextrous without really any notice in accuracy between hands, if anything I'm more accurate left handed due to focusing more but shooting right handed is far more natural for me so in that regard I haven't entertained the idea of switching hands.

I have contemplated switching hands with a bow because I want to shoot with both eyes open but have never taken the time to go to a shop and shoot a left handed bow. With that said though, I have spent quite a bit of time shooting a bow so I've been able to hold my own with quite a few really good shots, which is also another part of the reason I haven't fully entertained the idea of switching hands. Could I potentially be more accurate left handed than right? Maybe?

Growing up, shooting both eyes open was never a thing, it wasn't until my adult life and former career that shooting both eyes open was almost considered "mandatory", so I have learned how to shoot a pistol and rifle both eyes open and now get messed up if I close one eye.
 
I'm right handed, left eye dominant, with a pistol and rifle I shoot both eyes open, with a bow and shotgun, I close my left eye. With a pistol and rifle (AR specifically) I can shoot ambidextrous without really any notice in accuracy between hands, if anything I'm more accurate left handed due to focusing more but shooting right handed is far more natural for me so in that regard I haven't entertained the idea of switching hands.

I have contemplated switching hands with a bow because I want to shoot with both eyes open but have never taken the time to go to a shop and shoot a left handed bow. With that said though, I have spent quite a bit of time shooting a bow so I've been able to hold my own with quite a few really good shots, which is also another part of the reason I haven't fully entertained the idea of switching hands. Could I potentially be more accurate left handed than right? Maybe?

Growing up, shooting both eyes open was never a thing, it wasn't until my adult life and former career that shooting both eyes open was almost considered "mandatory", so I have learned how to shoot a pistol and rifle both eyes open and now get messed up if I close one eye.
If you're a "good" shot, you'll become a "great" shot. It's not a difference you will notice indoors at 20 yards, but you will notice it the more you stack factors against you.
 
I do the same shooting pistols and don't feel the need to switch hands. Archery and rifles are different due to how your head rests and aligns with the string/stock. My point is that in shooting sports, which eye you aim with is more important than which finger pulls the trigger.
How old are you?
I'm not being a smarta** but switching at a younger age is easier.

I think wing shooting is most critical for shooting dominant eye. Scoped rifle is probably the least.

It seems that the jury is still out on shooting dominant eye in archery as an absolute requirement to be accurate. The target is stationary and consistent form and shot execution is the key to accuracy. If you can do the exact same thing every time then the arrow will go to the same place. Legendary Olympic archery coach Kisik Lee is a proponent of shooting dominant hand because of dexterity issues involved in the release which he feels is the key to accuracy (shooting Olympic recurve with a finger tab at 70 meters)

Based on the percentage of cross eye dominance in the general population you would think there would be more than 4 left handed Olympic archery medalists since the 1970's and exactly zero left handed competitors from Korea, the ruler of international archery.
 
This subject has been somewhat recently discussed at some length on this same forum. You won't (likely) get different or better answers than here:

 
Back
Top