the first thing is not to get impatient,, progress with a bow can take days or weeks or months, and be slow,,you just have to keep working and make a little progress at a time,,
when I started back with my elk bow, I put a piece of tape at 28 inches of draw so I would know I was drawing the bow consistantly,,I shot so many different bows this year I needed that for a guide,,
I would pull the bow to full draw looking at the tape then aim and shoot,, and not so well I may add,,sometimes i would hit where I was looking and it seemed like an accident, but,,, the accicents got more consistant,,
I did warm up with some pushups and stretches, and half draws before each shooting session, I think that was key to not getting an injury,,
I shot one arrow at a time walking to the target after each shot and didnt keep exact count, but like 20 arrows a session trying to not overdo it,,
I will say I felt like giving up a couple times and trying a different bow, but then I would make a little progress and keep going,,
ok more to come let me think,,
my Main concern was consistency of my first arrow with no warm up shots,,this was a hard look in the mirror,, its easy to get warmed up and hit the mark a few times and think, ,well Im shooting great,, but that first shot is a little more telling, so I concentrated on that, keeping track each day if I would have killed my elk or not,, its takes more concentration to shoot a great first shot for me,, so that was my guage of inprovement, not if I shot an impressive group later in the day,,