I feel sad because I do not have the capacity (or time) to practice over an hour. I can't even reach the 45 minute mark!
I feel guilty for my lack of perseverance.
i always feel pressured to stop practicing by my family, even though they don't say anything, i know they are trying to watch tv or do something. ugh.it seems like whenever i am actually making some good progress i am forced to stop to do some household chore. Part of me wouldn't want to go on vacations because of the piano issue.
I like how you put that, it's exactly what I get! The biggest problem is that I'm getting used to it, damn life getting in the way... I could probably fix that though....I don't know if sadness helps anything, but I think that getting frustrated with piano isn't necessarily a bad thing. I read somewhere a letter written by William Kapell talking about how frustrated he gets because he can't quite get things to sound so good as he'd like, and he was amazing!
As for being frustrated... Have you ever started something, or to continued something, spent time and effort, but didn't get anywhere? This is beyond frustration, beyond motivating yourself and persisting. If there are speed walls, there are "mind walls." How do you get past that?
No motivation? uh oh!My first thought: have you been performing much? Some people say they play for themselves, but performing is such an important aspect to me, I usually have a hard time believing them.
As for motivation - I've had times when I've felt stagnate & a loss of motivation. The quickest and best pick-me-up is to go see someone perform. go see *several* good pianists perform.... It couldn't hurt anyway. ?
Ack, that makes me feel worse. Tongue Especially since I'm very critical.
Plus I managed to memorize (albeit, unintentionally) two pieces. I used my old pieces (the ones I have play for ten years) as my sight reading practice pieces.
Don't know if I feel sad, but I have noticed that if I don't play for a couple of days I start feeling vaguely dissatisfied with life in a way I can't put my finger on. Once I sit and get some work done at the piano, make some progress with something, there is like an "aaaaaah" feeling and that dissatisfied feeling goes away.
Eh same! But tbh if I'm really sad, frustrated or disappointed with something I tend to not practice the piano.....but not practicing makes me feel worse as a person :')It's definitely better to practice every day for at least half an hour to make progress and be satisfied ~ even if it's working on an exam piece.