I bet you're a better shooter for it.
It's always us. When my gun shoots 8" 'groups' at 20m, I dry fire for a bit, and voila, the gun miraculously tightens up.
Some guns are easier to shoot than others. Glocks are very good at pointing out our trigger control problems, because in order for them to be accurate, one must be perfect on the trigger pull.
I have nothing to prove, but I do get a kick out of tight groups with a stock gun...
OP:
wicked-police may not be here to hold your hand and pat your head, but he's given you solid info. I'd take the advice for what it's worth over trying to fix a gun that isn't broken.
Buy some dummy rounds, and load 1 or 2 in every mag you shoot.
If the sights dip or pull when it goes "click", then it's you pulling your shots just before the trigger break.
Front sight, front sight, front sight, front sight....Presssssssssssssssssssss.
And don't say "now" to yourself when your sight picture looks good. Smooth press to the rear, always.
And... call your shots. Eventually you'll be able to put a lot of mental focus on that front sight, and you will be able to tell when your shot hit just by watching where the front sight goes.
Good luck sorting it out!