Friday 6 November 2020

We do not learn in a straight line it is a crazy journey and a tipping point event.

 

We do not learn in a straight line it is a crazy journey and a tipping point event.

 

Over the years I have pondered how people learn. I have looked at my learning which resembles a wrestling match; sometimes I win sometimes I lose.

To me the way that people learn is not a gradual improvement which seems to be the model implied in most academic areas. In fact it is more consistent with the idea of the mediaeval revelation where at some point in time after much trial and tribulation it is revealed to you.

We see this idea more in Joseph Campbell’s hero’s journey or any saga; a long journey with lots of tribulation, failures, and alliances, some form of cheating, double-dealing and then achieving the aim, sometimes not in the way that was anticipated; and then the journey back, with the treasure.

The reason I think this is so important is that it dissolves the illusion of how things happen, our intellectual reasoning mind wants things to be measured and mapped but I don’t think the world works like this and the more I interview people for the ‘Creative’ podcast the more I see it. In fact I haven’t actually met anyone who’s had a straightforward trajectory to what they have achieved.

I have spoken to people whose life has been rocked by bizarre events, near death experiences, strange meetings by chance, lucky breaks, disappointments that led to something else but whatever it is  never a gradual improvement on a level road taking us to our target.

It seems that the mind needs to get to that point where the pressure has built up so much that the dam bursts. For the guitarist the amount of practice becomes like a tsunami that enables the muscular aspects to change, for the singer they suddenly find their voice, for the novelist the plot with all its twists and turns comes into view, for the entrepreneur the idea suddenly presents itself out of nowhere.

Now that is not to say that we do not need strategies and tactics that enable us to create and open doorways, because sometimes the Muses aren’t waiting they have to be called maybe by having techniques that get us into that mind frame they hear us and we are prepared  to channel an idea.

You see everything is really like that, we don’t gradually learn to ride a bike, we suddenly learn to ride a bike after spending a lot of time falling off, it’s the same with surfing, walking, talking, in fact the most common graph that you could draw is a steep rise followed by a plateau, then another steep rise followed by another plateau and so on.

In one of the solo shows called Tough Love, I talk about really good pupil who just suddenly gave up when they were just on the cusp of making a great improvement, however in today’s way of thinking with all its ‘let’s have it now’ attitude many people stop achieving, and this is exacerbated by the parents who don’t want little Johnny or little Melissa to be bored or to have to contact with the uncomfortable feeling of struggle. However this attitude may be the very thing that is destroying the young mind when learning to deal with difficulty is what we would have termed in the past, ‘character building’.

So let us get away from this comfort zone and look at how we learn, let us embrace the frustration and the delay and the sore fingers and be prepared for the judgement day went suddenly we can do that thing.

You know it is worth it that is why not many people can play an instrument or do anything at a high level unless they can wrestle with their angels and demons.

 

Vic

 www.bluescampuk.co.uk

www.patreon.com/vichyland 

 

 

 

 

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