We don’t become better at things we do – we become better at things we pay attention to while we’re doing them.
I’d like to thank you for articulating something that now seems obvious to me, but was in fact at variance with both my beliefs and what I believed I believed.
It also describes failures I’ve had to improve my own skillsets accurately. As an example, I had tried to learn guitar for some time.
While doing so, my internal mental dialogue while learning was ‘I just need to get through this fifteen minutes of practice’, as opposed to ‘Ah, so that’s how I play a G chord.’. I abandoned the attempt as I learned very slowly, and decided I simply had no natural talent for the area, as my learning speed was significantly slower there compared to friends of mine who were spending comparable amounts of time for vastly superior results.
I’d like to thank you for articulating something that now seems obvious to me, but was in fact at variance with both my beliefs and what I believed I believed.
It also describes failures I’ve had to improve my own skillsets accurately. As an example, I had tried to learn guitar for some time.
While doing so, my internal mental dialogue while learning was ‘I just need to get through this fifteen minutes of practice’, as opposed to ‘Ah, so that’s how I play a G chord.’. I abandoned the attempt as I learned very slowly, and decided I simply had no natural talent for the area, as my learning speed was significantly slower there compared to friends of mine who were spending comparable amounts of time for vastly superior results.