Cameron,
Shooting glasses should be your next purchase. I use and recommend Champions because you can position the lens parallel to the rear site. If you don't feel like spending $$$ on the Olympic model, the World Champion 3 or 4 are perfectly fine. If you're nearsighted like me you'll likely need your normal prescription upped by +0.25 or +0.50 diopters to account for the greater distance from the lens to your pupil. Talk to your optometrist and see if he/she will let you bring in your glasses and rifle.
OK i have to clear this up, i don't have a "real" prescription i have a minor astigmatism other than that my vision is perfect i have the glasses for safety reasons, range requirements. the clear plastic safety glasses get scratched easily are difficult to see through, and fog easily.
Does the shooting pad slope toward the targets? I've heard of some ranges doing this to help with rain run-off. It looks sloped to me, and your position -- and the spotting scope -- seems high as a result. Everyone's different but most shooters tend to prefer a lower-ish position for stability. What @Telecomtodd is referring to is leaning the rifle over to the right to reload without lifting your right arm. This is much easier with a lower position but it's never worked for me. YMMV.
OK i will look into this more tomorrow, what does YMMV mean?
Something to practice at home is getting into position and having a friend mark the position of your right elbow with a spot of tape, and then dryfiring while "loading" and focusing on putting your elbow down in the same position every time. A mirror is helpful for monitoring as you shouldn't be looking to see where your elbow goes while breaking position. I don't do this nearly as often as I should but it did help me. Moving to a shooting mat with "Top Grip" material helped, too.
unfortunately i cant dry-fire or practice at home :( i live on a military base and have to keep my rifle locked in the armory unless I am working, cleaning, or shooting with her. i do however now have access to an area at the range that i am allowed to use 24/7 i set them up with an air rifle range and was issued a key, i clean and maintain also
I like your idea of filming your training: how high/far away did you position the camera? I'm a long way away from any other shooters and having a video diary to show coaches is interesting. . . .
Jason
the camera is Nikon from wal-mart and i have it placed on a tri-pod about 10' away. but like mentioned earlier other angles might be more useful i choose the above angle because i wanted to see my head position.