... Now what do I do this this knowledge. Do I follow the intuitive or keep gapping. I have 20 day before deer season. Strange time to learn a cool new thing.
The question isn't so much which is better. The question is which will you do when the chips are down and the adrenalin is flowing with a deer in range. I can't answer that for you, but for me I shoot instinctive. In fact I usually have no memory of drawing the bow or releasing the arrow. Once I commit to the shot the rest happens by itself. So, one second I'm focused on the spot I want to hit and the next the arrow is in flight. The only exception to this is if I see cover in the way. For some reason, having to shoot around or through cover changes my focus to the point that I can gap or what I refer to as "shooting the trajectory" where I envision the flight the arrow will take and shoot it down that path. I shoot well doing that, odd that I can't do it all the time. On the other hand, over time I've stopped trying to stop deer with a bleat the way the wheelie folks do. There's no need when shooting instinctively. If the deer is moving I just focus on the spot and when the arrow appears it has lead applied. This works much better as a stopped deer is alert and there's a good chance it'll jump the string. Lane is right, it's like the "force" in star wars. If you can shoot instinctive, it'll serve you well.
Don't over think your shooting. Be confident and practice enough to retain that confidence. If a deer comes in and you miss, it wasn't that deer's day to die. Nock another arrow and shoot the next one. Wild predators don't get every deer they try for and neither will we. You will get one this season.
George