The pros and the emotionally conned
Do you ever just not feel like doing something? Pretty common isn't it? What kinds of things do you need to feel like doing in order to be able to do them well?
My client today bought a banjo some time ago and I asked him how his development was going and he gave me a look of, "Don't ask" and said that even though he knows he should practice, he doesn't really feel like it. As I see it, this is a problem we are facing more and more as we have bought into the idea that what we do is meant to feel good and if it doesn't we should wait until we have the right feelings and conditions to give it a go.
I see this as nonsense because no matter how much we like to learn, rarely does being a beginner feel good as it is coupled with failure and frustration at the speed of progression as well as other factors. Only being able to act under fair weather conditions (feeling good) severely limits our ability to act and, it means that we are much less willing to approach anything that feels like work because, work by most people's definition is not enjoyable.
Someone once said something along the lines of while amateurs need to feel like it, professionals do it regardless, meaning that a professional is able to employ their skills to a high degree even if they don't feel like it. Imagine a band made up of musicians who can only play a gig when they feel like playing, how many cancelled concerts would there be?
This is what all the practice is for that a professional puts themselves through , consistency of skill. Needing the right feeling to perform well is not controllable skill because to make it so means being able to control the emotions and disconnect feeling from what is required in the moment. If someone is only able to do their job when they feel like it, would you hire them to work in your business?
Of course, recreational activities are a different matter as there is no pressing need to have to get things done but when it comes to tasks that are time sensitive in nature and carry responsibility and cost of inaction, feelings should not come into the equation at all unless they aid fulfillment.
This idea of feel good to perform is a con we have been sold that holds us back from doing a lot of what leads to personal empowerment and independence. Being bound to our immediate emotional state which can flick like a flag in the wind, creates an environment that we ourselves are unable to trust, let alone those who might be looking to put their trust in us.
Of course, all of this is going to be case and person dependent but in my view, our actions are far too influenced by emotional states that are unreliable at best and our reactions are far too unpredictable to put much faith in them at all. This goes into the responses common to internet chatrooms where extreme swings and polarization are typical in discussions as essentially there is no sense of professionalism, it is all thoughtless emotional reaction and limits the effectiveness of having the conversation at all.
Emotional reaction can become an inhibitor of skill development if we put too much credence in what it tells us as whenever something begins to feel uncomfortable, we would want to stop and it is in that discomfort that the learning begins. Enough practice leads to improvement and what that means is the skill to perform is less affected under emotional duress and can maintain high levels even in extreme conditions.
What I find is that there are some skill areas where feeling is an incredibly useful tool if channeled well though and tat is often in creative areas. Heartbreak can turn into a love song, uncerainty into a painting or fear into a poem. However, the channeling of emotion is emotional control. An artist who can't perform their art unless they feel like it is unlikely to ever be able to tap into the creative force emotion can inspire.
The trick I guess to using emotion well is much like being able to take opportunity as it presents. There is an investment aspect required to have the resources available at the right time to utilize when the conditions are favorable. An artist needs to be able to hold their brush with a skilled hand even while the emotional turmoil swirls within to translate it onto the canvas, and that takes a lot of practice in discomfort, a lot of work when not feeling it.
There is no such thing as perfect conditions, there is just the depth of resources available in whatever conditions are present. We have control over where we spend our time and which skills we develop but all skills lose potency if they can only be used when we feel good enough to use them.
Taraz
[ a Steem original ]
The more qualified we are the less emotional baggage to get in the way. But, of course any new endeavor may require skills that are not yet developed. I believe it is all about the attitude you have when you begin this new journey. To not engage in something new because of a lack of skill only inhibits you from growing as a person. As we get older we tend to get set in our ways, avoiding things we lack experience in. I for one look at this as a challenge. We should never be to old to learn. The satisfaction that accompanies mastering something new is extremely rewarding. Apprehension disipates as a new skill set is acquired. With most things I do these days, I never look at it as work, but rather categorize it as hobitational. This word will not be found in Merriam Webster Dictionary, it is simply a word I have come up with to recategorize something that to others may feel like work, into something that is more like a hobby. Attitude is everything!
It reminds me of spring and all the good intentions. People go out and buy exercise equipment and use it for 2 weeks and it gets put away in the garage. People are not prepared to put the commitment required into whatever they think they desire as it may take some effort.
Rain or shine, professions are always in training, always performing and when they are incapable of doing what they want, they find something else to do that supports them.
My vote timings are shocking. Was meant to come back after a few minutes and catch it at the right time. Just 40 minutes late this time as I end up doing something else.
Lol. Don't worry too much about it =)
Right T, you have just got this Knight motivated to pull out his Ukulele and have a strum.
Not that I need to now, because about 4-5 years back I put in a couple hundred hours and pushed through that novice period you spoke of. It was aweful - but now I can pick up a song book and play many (easier) songs, so it was worth that early pain.
So tell your mate - set aside 200 hours over the next 12 months and he will be playing his Banjo for enjoyment.
Great post.
SirKnight.
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I think it is pretty incredible how fast we are able to learn a skill to a fun level of ability. Mastering obviously takes much more but for most things isn't necessary.
I will tell home of course. :)
That was part of the reason I did it - learn a new skill to open up new areas of the brain. Before the Ukulele (having next to no musical experience as a kid) I taught myself to juggle. Juggling is said to be great for the mind.
Now I was willing to put in the time to learn to juggle 3 balls - and that didn't take that long to master. Maybe 30 minutes a day for 3 weeks. But going up to 4 is a big step. I can pick up 3 of anything now and juggle (once you have it you've got it for life). If I can motivate myself as your post suggests, I might try to free up some time to learn 4. In fact - yes I am going to find the time.
What about you T - aside from writing, any talents you have developed lately?
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I have heard this but never seriously tried.
I was getting more heavily into photography before the baby was born but it was so difficult with her that the dedicated learning got put on hold. At the 2 year point (January) I am going to give myself a very hard look in the mirror here and adjust. 12 hours a day plus work and family is too much to continue with.
I also started dancing about 10 years ago and have added several different styles but that has been on hold the last 2 years mostly too. The goal is to get the little one up and running to the point we don't have to worry about leaving her somewhere overnight.
Btw, Will there be a "@sirknight Vimm spectacular" coming?
Doubt it - it is like anything, if you want to be at the top of your craft, you need to spend at least a few hours a day on it. I don't have this time available to bring me up to a public performance level.
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The better you are, the more investment it takes. A top sprinter trains for years for fractions of seconds, it is incredible to think about the effort involved for so little time gained. :)
Oh, I am an absolutely terrible singer but my daughter loves singing. I will one day have some lessons so I can at least hold a note with her.
There will never be a public performance. :D
For me it's the opposite. I can't stop doing things! However, this does not mean I'm super productive. I tend to do a lot of none essential stuff. I have started doing meditation last week to calm myself down. Hopefully that will bring me some peace :)
Emotions influence ... but they should not handle us ... in my last job, I was always pleased with my work ... without any, in the last 3 years, they changed my boss and they put us a boss who did the job very little bearable, he was a very hostile person, he shouted to the workers and he committed many abuses ... I did not feel comfortable, I did not want to be there, but every day I was going to fulfill my responsibility, and despite what Discouraged that I felt, I performed well my work, the man was very happy with my work and assigned me tasks of great responsibility, but I did not feel good for the environment, when he ran over my colleagues ... but I did not leave that will affect the outcome of my work ... and my obligations.
The rot of "feel good" actions that dominate much of the humam race stems from the lack of purpose and being much of humanity has been inflicted through the slow poisoning of the humanist drivel. Much of the West indoctrinates its drones with emphasis on "freedom," while disregarding self-discipline necessary to exercise liberty, obligations inherent in a man's station, and principles indispensable in ordering his actions.
The modern idiots in "education" institutions preach "do what you love" or some such nonsense, driving the drones into frenzied activity of futility in examining feelings, rather than objective analysis of their given aptitude to pursue their given station in life. In reality, men "love" that at which they are proficient; men do not "love" a skill, then become proficient.
Discipline may return for at least some when the hard place many will find themselves is hard enough.
I was talking about this the other day. Do what you love without considering the source and why you actually love it....
Motivation can come from many directions. But sometimes one is not motivated.Emotions creep in. I often say I never get bored only unmotivated. So we learn to suck it up and do the task at hand because we know it has to get done. I have learned that when I do one thing it can motivate me to do another and soon I am being productive. Nice music example you provided. As a life long musician I can relate. Thanks @tarazkp