Yes, it is a tough pill to swallow when you realize your fundamental aren’t solid. Recently, I’ve found that as I haven’t been shooting that much, that I have to go back to basics. Front sight focus, trigger control, etc. Really humbling and I do want to and plan to put time in to work on those. It’s also frustrating when I think I’m putting in time to work on things and I end up finding that I had been developing bad habits. There’s always work on the fundamentals.
As for precision rifle, I had aspirations of taking my 700 out to Puuloa. I had emailed one of the organizers back and forth, but never made it out. Haven’t been shooting my 700 much since. I used to really want to get a 20” iron sight AR and shoot the matches as well, but that also went on the back burner.
I am just curious on how people push themselves to improve. Be it more speed oriented shooting or even accuracy. I think things can tend to get stagnant and that’s where I think things that push failure points help that. Sort of like weight training when you plateau, need something to help break that and push you over the jump. Maybe that’s more mental discipline training in terms of precision rifle, but important and interesting just as much as more tactical/sport aspect of shooting.