-
My 60-day money back dilemma
I have a note in my diary next week to say that it’s coming up to 60 days since I joined, and to review whether I want to continue or whether to ask for a refund. I’m in a real dilemma.
First, the good: I think Tony’s teaching style is great. I love the play-through and I print the tabs to have them in front of me as I play. I write the finger placements on the tabs (I,M,R,P). I love the exposure to different songs, all of which are to my musical taste. I have learned more guitar techniques in the last 50-something days than I have in the previous 7 years of dabbling.
Now the bad: I have hearing difficulties with speech and sometimes Tony races through descriptions of finger placements, etc, so quickly that I have had to use AI to give me a printed transcript which I then go through at my own, very slow, pace. (Yes, I know I can slow the video but that doesn’t work for me). I find I have to spend at least an hour every evening just to accomplish the challenge at a very superficial level. Many times I would like to have a week to really practice a song, but there’s no time for that, because it’s on to the next daily challenge. I’m afraid I will end up with a half-baked understanding of lots of different techniques.
So far, I’ve skipped one whole week of challenges just so I can take the previous week at half speed, and even that felt like I was rushing it. This week I have learned that if I skip the improvisation day then I can have more practice time for Monday and Tuesday’s lessons.
Then there’s hand size. I’m a small guy with small hands. Every time I see Tony say something like ‘move your pinky down to the 4th fret’ my heart just sinks. It gives a big message in flashing lights in my head saying “Guitar is not for you”. I counter this with the fact that some famous guitarists, e.g. Paul Simon, also have small hands. I persevere but end up frustrated and angry with myself that something that is simple for many people requires me to spend ages finding a hand contortion (sometimes painful) that almost works some of the time.
So here I am, on the horns of a dilemma, excited about the progress I have made, but also frustrated and angry that the course is much too challenging for me. Will I end up with a bunch of half-baked techniques, a jack of all trades but master of none? Is it teaching me that guitar is not my instrument? Is the course going much too quickly that I don’t have a hope of keeping up with? I really don’t know what my decision will be.
I’d love to hear your advice, especially from anyone who has similar challenges with small hands.
Tom
Log in to reply.
