I think I am right, that you fitted the clicker, shot, and found it was OK where it was. That is a good start but not necessarily the best start.
A better way might be to find out how much arrow overhang there is when you first contact your face with the string. Then draw a comfortable amount further and see how much the overhang has reduced. This is best done with an observer, or video.
When you find the difference between reaching your face with the string and pulling a comfortable amount more, you can set the clicker so that it is about midway between the two. With the clicker set that way, you should not get a click before reaching your face with the string. Nor should you pull to the point of blowing a fuse, before it clicks.
If you then shoot without the clicker, the shot should be released at a draw length very close to the one the clicker is set for.
Drawing way past your sensible draw , when you don't use the clicker, sounds to me as if you are drawing, and still drawing for the click to happen which is too far because there isn't going to be a click. Or put another way, it seems you forgot the clicker wasn't in use that shot.
Doing this in a round is bound to make things look far worse than they really are.
In your situation, I would set the clicker as suggested( unless it is already in the right area ) I would shoot three arrows with the clicker and three without. The objective here is to shoot good shots; so close range( 10m) is a good idea. Good shots; where you ignore everything but the drawing of the bow. Drawing without the clicker means you shoot when you feel ready/strong/comfortable.
When the clicker is in use, the same draw is used and the clicker goes while you are comfortable/strong/ and prepared to release.
You may draw well past the clicker before you release. You may hear the clicker, draw a little further and not release for a second or so. You are not compelled to shoot at the "click"!! I would get used to that and, while learning, try hard not to stop drawing at the click sound.
The draw is not ; draw, click, stop drawing, release. You will still be drawing when you release, with or without the clicker.
The only real difference is that one way is silent and the other has a click, if it is loud enough. The click is more like "permission to go when ready."