-
Getting frustrated? Some humble advice to try
I posted this as a reply to a comment on a video where the poster mentioned they are so frustrated that they thought about quitting. I have pasted my humble advice here in the hopes it might help someone else feeling similar…
“So the thought of quitting means you are not playing to the level you want to yet, which is very relatable! But that “inner critic” is actually important and can be turned to good as its letting you know what you can improve. I know for me, frustration is usually the result of a mistake I made while playing, and usually its because I’m trying to do too much or play too fast without really having what I’m playing down solid or built up. Remember, practice makes PERMANENT, so if you are making mistakes, you are learning mistakes! So its VITAL to take everything that you are first learning so slow that you cannot learn a mistake. I cannot stress this enough. Take those playback videos and start on the lowest speed (to change the speed click the bottom right of the player where it says 1x to .5x) and play it. If you make a mistake, stop the playback, thinking about what caused the mistake, make the correction, and drill that section at least 5x’s perfect in a row. Then incorporate that section back into the full video. If you make a different mistake later in the video, do the same process of stopping, think about what caused the mistake, make the correction, and drill that section playing it at least 5x’s perfectly (I do 8x) and start again. Once you can play through the entire exercise 5xs in a row perfectly at this slow tempo, then up the tempo to the next level. If you make a mistake at this new speed, repeat the process above. Once you play it 5x’s in a row perfect at this new time, raise the tempo again, and repeat this process until you get it to the speed you want. Note, this process may not all occur in a single day or practice session, but might take weeks or months to get something up to the speed you want, but the important part is you are learning only what you want to play and not learning mistakes.
I know this sound tedious but frustration happens when we try to dive in at full speed and we make mistakes, and with the way the brain works, anything we play is now learned! So that mistake and the tension / frustration with it and is now inside us attached to this song / exercise. So again, I want to stress the importance of taking anything you learn as slow as you can where you do not make ANY mistakes and train your brain so the only way it can play this is correctly. Then SLOWLY over weeks / months build it up to the speed you want. Congratulations on recognizing that you are frustrated and choosing to continue, that is actually a BIG step. The next will be minimizing that frustration by learning things correctly and slowly. On a side note, the brain continues to work out problems even when you are done practicing, so its not unusual to struggle learning something one day, but the next when you come back to it its much easier! So dont let that frustration get you down, as it truly can be helpful if you direct it. I hope this helps!”
Hopefully that makes sense. If it does not reply here and I’ll try to explain it better. I believe I only have a few weeks left before my subscription runs out but I will keep checking this post until it does. Enjoy your journey!
Log in to reply.
