Wasn't sure if this would be of interest to any of the students or not...
After well over two decades of not playing consistently (for 10 years not at all), about four months ago I started playing again. When I was young, I played constantly, at a fairly high level, but I started over at an elementary level. In those four months, I went from elementary to playing at an intermediate level, almost advanced intermediate.
My teacher assigned me a Chopin Mazurka, which I memorized and played fairly well, though needed work on the dynamics a bit. It took some real work and dedication to get it rigeasy ht. When I went to my lesson, my teacher didn't even have me play it through-just was unhappy with the dynamics, said "work on it," and assigned another piece. This piece is supposed to be easier, but I'm finding it harder, and she also introduced a lot of theory at that lesson. She also gave me an easier piece to play as an alternative.
So I'm floundering a bit to get the two hands working together, even though individually the hands, for a section of this are memorized (I'm taking little chunks at a time out of a six page piece). After spending several hours trying to put them together, I have found myself unmotivated, though I love this piece.
It seems it's normal to hit a wall and I found this forum to have good advice. I'm 53 years old and am in the same boat as the older folk, whose comments you'll see towards the end of this forum. I'm going to take the advice given and slow down.
Just thought it might be useful:
https://www.abrsm.org/forum/lofiversion/index.php/t42536.htmlAny more advice on "hitting the wall" is gratefully received. I haven't put it into practice yet and am still procrastinating though my lesson is two days away. It's been two days since I've been able to convince myself to practice.