First I would like to say that I do plan on taking a class eventually. I am a former smallbore and air rifle competition shooter shto through high school and college and then shot some matches after graduation. I can shoot however it is a completely different ballgame. I am used to having 60 seconds per shot really no stress except for what you have going on in your own head blinders to block your vision so that really all you see are your sights and target. Well none of that really lends itself to shooting under external stressful conditions also I have found that I take longer to shoot since I have ingrained the “everything has to be perfect take the time you have plenty of it” mentality of target shooting.
Anyone have any ideas for getting me out of the slow speed into high speed
If your goal is to shift gears to higher speed, you might benefit from the variety of action shooting sports that reward a combination of accuracy and speed. USPSA and IDPA pistol, USPSA and other 3-gun and multi-gun are good choices.
However, you should not try to “become fast.” Start at a pace where you can get all of the hits in a course of fire, then over time start pushing yourself to go a little faster. If you try to just go fast without developing the requisite skills to go with it, you’ll 1) be a safety risk to others and yourself, and 2) won’t get get good hits on the target, which defeats the purpose.
Since you understand the fundementals well, it’s nothing more than learning to apply them faster.
Start by performing the manipulation drills slowly to learn the proper technique and form. Start increasing speed little by little, if you find youself making errors, slow down, correct them then pick it back up. Push the envelope and find that spot to where you can manipulate the weapon and related gear without the errors.
Once you get that stuff down, start adding more complex drills, same approach.
Depending on what you are doing, deploy the kit with accuracy first, speed will come. Also, understand what may be a balance in the two, acceptable accuracy(sight management/how accurate do I need to be?)
Just remember, do it right, build the base. It’s nothing more than applying the fundementals. Learn the weapon system, related gear, how to care for it, how it works, etc.