J
Jak Angelescu
Guest
Hey guys and dolls!
I know I’m a little early on my weekly thing I like to do but I can’t help it. Last night I was practicing lesson 25 and there are a lot of things I realized I really need to work on. Things that I have been sweeping (perfect pun) under the carpet and ignoring. I’d like to address the concept of being “use to failing” and not “progressing” or “succeeding.” What do I mean by this?
Think about how many times you practice, and you mess up. Seriously. You miss a bend, your high E string snaps off the neck during a vibrato and makes a popping squeak sound, you miss a note, you fall behind, etc. And you will do this over and over and OVER again for hours. And you’re still messing up. How long does it take you to ‘mess up’ before you finally well, nail it? The ratio of mess-ups to nailing it is a wide range that is in the favor of mess-ups. I feel that over time this act of more ‘mess-ups’ than successes can make us feel overly “use to failing” to a point where we may shy away from things that are challenging and we don’t break out of our comfort zones. Our confidence breaks, we become profound perfectionists, and next thing we know we may feel we’ll never get where we want to be. We’ve become so “use to failing” that we don’t understand just how capable we are at achieving something.
I don’t want you to think like this.
I don’t want you to let the fears of failure to override the joy of success.
You owe it to yourself to succeed and be proud of it and be happy with your accomplishments.
Know that when you “mess up”, you’re not actually “messing up.” You’re actually improving!! Every little mistake you make is a step and is a learning and growing progress, and it’s in these mistakes is where you learn the most, and it is something to be proud of. I can’t even begin to tell you how sad I feel when I see guitarists being criticized for every little damn thing because we live in a society of photoshop, pitch fix, auto-tune, filters, crop and chop, cut and paste, edit and delete. Don’t succumb to the rat race of being the best at everything. Instead aim to grow and learn.
Much love to all my fellow Synners!!!
I know I’m a little early on my weekly thing I like to do but I can’t help it.
Think about how many times you practice, and you mess up. Seriously. You miss a bend, your high E string snaps off the neck during a vibrato and makes a popping squeak sound, you miss a note, you fall behind, etc. And you will do this over and over and OVER again for hours. And you’re still messing up. How long does it take you to ‘mess up’ before you finally well, nail it? The ratio of mess-ups to nailing it is a wide range that is in the favor of mess-ups. I feel that over time this act of more ‘mess-ups’ than successes can make us feel overly “use to failing” to a point where we may shy away from things that are challenging and we don’t break out of our comfort zones. Our confidence breaks, we become profound perfectionists, and next thing we know we may feel we’ll never get where we want to be. We’ve become so “use to failing” that we don’t understand just how capable we are at achieving something.
I don’t want you to think like this.
I don’t want you to let the fears of failure to override the joy of success.
You owe it to yourself to succeed and be proud of it and be happy with your accomplishments.
Know that when you “mess up”, you’re not actually “messing up.” You’re actually improving!! Every little mistake you make is a step and is a learning and growing progress, and it’s in these mistakes is where you learn the most, and it is something to be proud of. I can’t even begin to tell you how sad I feel when I see guitarists being criticized for every little damn thing because we live in a society of photoshop, pitch fix, auto-tune, filters, crop and chop, cut and paste, edit and delete. Don’t succumb to the rat race of being the best at everything. Instead aim to grow and learn.
Much love to all my fellow Synners!!!