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Big Wins on 4 Levels
The first level is that I actually did all 5 lessons last week. I’ve never been any good at routine and consistency. I actually seem to fight regularity. Who knows why. Anyway, I didn’t manage to start on Monday, but I did Monday anyway… on Tuesday. Then, I only got 2 lessons done by Friday. Oh well, I did the 3rd lesson on Saturday and the 4th on Sunday and the 5th on Monday. I wouldn’t have done that before because I hadn’t kept up. Since I didn’t do it perfectly, why bother?
But no, Tony says something to the effect that he’d rather we had an imperfect guitar routine than to do nothing because it’s not perfect. So, following through and doing these lessons that I was interested in is a real win. This win is on the “first” level of consistency.
The second level is breaking things down. I was able to isolate transitioning to the barre chord up the neck. This has been a very hard learned lesson, to slow down and take things piece meal. On the Thursday lesson, I started with just getting the index finger and thumb into the proper position when going from the Am to the E7. I couldn’t grab the full chord in time with the rhythm, but I could get to the “pinch” (thumb and index). That gave me time to get my middle and ring down in time for the “and” beat.
That brings me to the third level which is the heart and soul of “small wins”, noticing how much we have improved. I was struggling with the “Ain’t No Sunshine” lessons all week. What’s different since I struggled with the daily challenge from the very beginning of joining TAC? WHAT I’m struggling with has changed completely. Finishing my thought from the previous paragraph, I was actually able to pinch the 5th string for my “1” beat and afterward put my middle and ring fingers down for the “and” beat. That’s huge and has taken 4 years of focused effort. But more, I wasn’t struggling with the muted notes by the Thursday lesson which requires the pinky to move across the strings to mute them… in time… then release for the next beat. By the Friday lesson, I wasn’t struggling with the percussive beat. Also, I had gotten the mixed timing values down and was just keeping the correct rhythm. All of this contributed to working on transitioning to a barre chord up the neck because I was freed up to focus on this.
That’s a lot of small wins. But, it was all made possible by the win on th<font color=”rgba(0, 0, 0, 0)” face=”inherit”>e 4th level. Normally, I get frustrated which leads to my becoming </font>overwhelmed<font color=”rgba(0, 0, 0, 0)” face=”inherit”>. I am finally starting to “take to heart” this idea of mistakes being good, not bad. Making mistakes means I’m pushing myself and learning how NOT to do something. Mistakes are actually a “normal” part of the learning process. Go figure. So, I’m “supposed” to think: “Cool, I’m making mistakes. I must be improving.” To get to that point has also take me the entire 4+ years I’ve been with TAC (I’m a slow learner). </font>
<font color=”rgba(0, 0, 0, 0)” face=”inherit”>To recap:</font>
<font color=”rgba(0, 0, 0, 0)” face=”inherit”>1) I was consistent with the “Ain’t No Sunshine” lessons in spite of the fact that I didn’t do a single lesson on the “correct day”.</font>
<font color=”rgba(0, 0, 0, 0)” face=”inherit”>2) I stayed calm and determined because I saw mistakes as a good thing.</font>
3) I was able to break things down to the “molecular” level so I could figure out how to improve “problem spots”.
4) Even though I was struggling, I was able to see how much I had improved and appreciate this whole process is working and that gives me even more determination to keep going and be happy with what I’m doing.
MG 😀
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