I have found a big reaction in me when people tell me : "it's not about the accomplishment (or the goal), but about the journey".
I disagree, in part, quite strongly. Firstly, every step is an accomplishment if we are actually getting somewhere, and if we are not getting anywhere, we are not actually taking a "journey" but merely wandering (aimlessly). Especially with the implied meaning that through the "journey" there would evolve individual growth, and that that is what it is "supposed" to be about.
Fundamentally, if one is not striving toward a destination, why go anywhere at all ? In piano practice, is it not considered the best use of time to set out a specific goal to accomplish however small or great ? Focus. How then would this same principle not apply to life itself ? Especially since the ideas to have a focused goal during something such as piano practice have evolved from life-experience ?
How can one ignore the accomplishments as though they have no importance ? Each arrival allows us greater views, and as we never actually learn it all, our greater view merely affords us a glimpse of greater heights beyond. A new goal. So, in a sense, the accomplishment is a natural part of the journey, and an important part at that.
If that is what is meant when you say "it's not about the accomplishment, but about the journey" then I will agree. But, with all due respect, I have never sensed that kind of depth to this particular statement.
In the meantime, I will focus my attention to certain goals, and I will love the journey, and I will love the accomplishment, too; it's about both (just as "fishing" is not merely a matter of casting, but of catching the fish too; it's a complete idea). It's just that as long as there is life, the growth is never truly over (at least not in this life-experience).
m1469 (who just had to speak her mind)