Take a class. Shooting well really
cannot be learned either from reading or from watching video; it requires a certain amount of hands-on activity. A good instructor will model the ideal behavior, give you a chance to try that behavior yourself, and then provide immediate positive feedback along with necessary corrections.
For example, I could write a 1800-word article about trigger control, describing the ideal "smooth press," explaining the importance of smoothly and steadily moving the trigger to the rear while holding the sights as aligned as you reasonably can, accepting the wobble as the minor artifact it really is, pressing steadily until the shot breaks and continuing to hold the trigger to the rear until the sights are re-aligned on target before you allow the trigger to come forward again. I could give you the vocabulary for all of those actions: smooth press, sight alignment, follow through.
But that wouldn't help you a bit. Because 99 students out of 100 WON'T ever grok that concept from being told it in words. They will continue to slap the snot out of the trigger while believing they are doing it correctly because now they have the words to describe what they're (not) doing.
I could instead show you a video of the same activity, so that you could see what my trained trigger finger does.
But it wouldn't help you much. Because 98 students out of 100 won't grok it from simply watching. And again, they will continue to slap the snot out of the trigger while believing they are doing it correctly. (And if you ask them, they will say they pressed "smoothly" and "followed through" even though they did neither.)
If you were here in person, I could take you to the range, place my trained trigger finger over yours while your sights were aligned, and physically transmit the sensation of pressing the trigger correctly -- directly from my trigger finger to yours, in the correct context. And only 1 or 2 out of 100 students won't grok the concept after that demonstration or a few others like it. (Those few will need repeated and
intensive coaching, but they'll get it eventually.)
That's just one example of the types of things that go on in a class.
Why's it matter? Well, if you go out to the range and practice yanking the trigger, slapping the trigger, jerking the trigger, or otherwise messing up the ideal, you
might eventually train yourself to hit the center of the target. Maybe. Most likely, what you will do is train yourself to repeatedly, consistently, and habitually repeat these errors.
Scientists say it takes around 1000 repetitions of an action to groove in a "muscle memory" (they hate that term) of how to do the task, and around 3 times that many repetitions to erase an action previously learned.
That means you can use 1000 rounds at the outset to learn the ideal action.
Or you can instead send however many rounds downrange you want,
then go take that class and basically write off all your previous shooting experience, starting over from scratch but with a needed 3000 rounds just to get to zero -- followed by another 1000 to groove in the new behavior.
Practice is excellent and necessary. Practicing the right things, even more so.
pax