thank yall very much for the replies.
I lost my depth perception due a concussion I got squirrel hunting, of all things. long story. I ironically, at the time of that concussion I was wearing a full body brace due a broken back I suffered in a different skydiving wreck. I don't know how to explain it because I never could have understood it before it happened to me, but my brain has formed a "work-around" to help with my brain interpreting the visual input I get every day. it is only a partial work-around for static things, and get something moving like a shotgun target and it breaks down
does anyone know any one-eyed shooters, shooting coaches who have worked with one-eyed shooters, or just good shooting instructors in general?
ted - hang in there and keep working on it. I lost 100% of my senses of taste and smell due to a different brain injury. I now have at very best 30-40% of my sense of taste and maaaaybe on a good day 10% of my sense of smell back. however, I listened to a segment on npr not long ago in which a doctor described retraining her brain to interpret smells after she lost 100% of it due to a brain injury. she discovered by accident that she could barely detect certain candle smells and developed a routine to actually exercise the area of her brain that interpreted smells. she has been making steady gains ever since. so keep working on it!!!