Coug, I keep tellin' you to get rid of the peeps, kissers and sights altogher. That stuff is okay for shooting targets but I think it's all worse than worthless in the hunting woods. Peep turns the wrong way. Can't see the pins or can't see the animal or both unless the lighting conditons are within certain parameters. And the peep and sights at least partially block your vision of everything, specifically the animal and it's immediate surroundings. The bow itself blocks off half your field of view, because it's sticking up there, just like getting stuck in one of the cheap seats behind one of the building columns at a basketball game. You only get to see half of the game.
Learn to shoot barebow. No peep, sights or kissers to try and peer though. You can cant the bow over and take it out of your field of vision also, so you have pretty much the full panoramic view of the scene. When you don't have all that fooferaw in front of your face, you can see everything, in alllighting conditions - except total darkness, of course.
Focus your concentrationon the spot behind the critter's shoulder, be aware of the arrow's tip in your peripheral vision for elevation reference, and let fly. A good anchor that puts the arrow directly under your master eye so you shoot down the center, thenalittle practice to ingrain the proper elevation sight picture for different distances. You're good to go.You should be shooting apple size groups at 35-40 yards in a few weeks time. And a deer's heart is how big?