When sitting at the bench preparing to make a long 800 yrd shot I have the scope cranked up. Every time my heart beats the scope will jump to the right about 10 ft, then back past the target to the left about 5 ft, then settle on the target. Slow steady breathing, concentration on the period between beats when the cross hairs are on the target, and your heart beat will slow down. Just after a beat you nudge that hair trigger and the gun goes off. Bullet strikes target right where you willed it to be. If your shot goes off during a heart beat, it will mean a miss by several feet, or a wounded animal.
Several years ago my Dad came to Alaska to go hunting with me. He borrowed my wife's Remington 1400. We changed out the stock with one of my rifles, since my wife's stock was cut down to a 12" pull. After leaving my wife switched it back. Just before leaving on a hunting trip the wife and I went to the range. Her first shot was 2" high at 12 o-clock, second shot was 2" at 3 o-clock level with bulls eye. Third shot touched the first one at 12 o-clock, 4th shot touched the second at 3 o-clock. So on for the 5th 6th 7th and 8th shots. She was really getting frustrated, saying Dad had ruined her gun. I went to my truck and got a big screw driver and a crescent wrench. I removed her recoil pad and using the screw driver with the crescent wrench on the flats under the handle, I got another quarter turn out of the screw. Next four shots were 2" high at 12 o-clock. Her stock was shifting after each shot, causing the change in POI.