There’s more to succeeding than natural ability. Here’s how to build your skill.
• Love Your Mistakes
We crave flawless performance, but mistakes strengthen talent. Each time you stumble, your mind sharpens as it tries to correct the mistake. To improve, reach just beyond your present ability. The gap between what you know and what you want to know is where you’ll learn most.
• Slow It Down
Going slowly lets your brain register what it’s doing at each step of the process. It’s like a working blueprint. For example, if you want to learn a piece of sheet music, cut it into strips, and select random strips to practice. Tackling individual components before attempting the whole task will help you to improve.
• Practice Doesn’t Always Make Perfect
Clocking up practice hours is only effective if you’re focused the whole time. Research shows that even world-class pianists, chess players and athletes only practice for three to five hours a day. After you depart the deep-practice zone there’s little benefit in carrying on. How long you stay in the zone differs for everyone. Stopping early doesn’t mean you aren’t dedicated.
• Reignite Motivation
Any talent requires motivational fuel-an emotional response such as fascination or love. It’s this emotional reaction that makes you learn faster, not innate skill. Talent needs passion to grow, so refresh yours by watching, listening to or reading about your hobby.
• Love Your Mistakes
We crave flawless performance, but mistakes strengthen talent. Each time you stumble, your mind sharpens as it tries to correct the mistake. To improve, reach just beyond your present ability. The gap between what you know and what you want to know is where you’ll learn most.
• Slow It Down
Going slowly lets your brain register what it’s doing at each step of the process. It’s like a working blueprint. For example, if you want to learn a piece of sheet music, cut it into strips, and select random strips to practice. Tackling individual components before attempting the whole task will help you to improve.
• Practice Doesn’t Always Make Perfect
Clocking up practice hours is only effective if you’re focused the whole time. Research shows that even world-class pianists, chess players and athletes only practice for three to five hours a day. After you depart the deep-practice zone there’s little benefit in carrying on. How long you stay in the zone differs for everyone. Stopping early doesn’t mean you aren’t dedicated.
• Reignite Motivation
Any talent requires motivational fuel-an emotional response such as fascination or love. It’s this emotional reaction that makes you learn faster, not innate skill. Talent needs passion to grow, so refresh yours by watching, listening to or reading about your hobby.
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