Early Bird Samurai: Leverage Your Morning

 

The book reinforces things I already practice. I am an early riser and walker. The author, a brain researcher, explains how the sun stimulates brain activity. Catch the worm!

The book reinforces things I already practice. I am an early riser and walker. The author, a brain researcher, explains how the sun stimulates brain activity. Catch the worm!

Cliche alert.  They say that the early bird catches the worm.   Well, yesterday, that proved to be true.  My window in Japan faces South and East and because Japan doesn’t do daylight savings I’m often up  without an alarm clock around 5 a.m.    Yesterday, I woke up even earlier and decided to head out even earlier for my walking/jogging, podcast listening, and moderate sun exposure.  When I walked to the local 自動販売機 (vending machine), I found a crumpled up 1000 円 bill.  That’s $10  ‘Murican.  As Benjamin “All About the Benjamins” Franklin said early to bed, early to rise, makes a man healthy, wealthy, and wise.”  Who needs worms?

There are distinct advantages to waking up early in Numazu.   The main one is that after 6 a.m. the sun starts to burn the precious.  But lately, I keep getting hit with other reminders of the power of rising early.   Sukiyama Takeshi, a brain researcher includes a whole chapter on the cognitive advantages of getting sunlight and walking outside in the early morning in his book The Brain’s Timetable (脳の時間が割).    The latest issue of Tarzan, a Japanese lifestyle magazine, is devoted to suggested early morning activities and highlights folks in different fields and their early morning routines.  

So “the universe” is guiding and bribing me to leverage my early morning.  You don”t have to join me.   Some people prefer the night.  But here are some reasons I prefer the morning:

  • Get it done before other concerns, distractions, and fatigue set in.
    I used to do a Japanese immersion service called Silverspoon.   You didn’t necessarily have to start early in the morning, but a lot of the “heavy lifting”  came early in the day.   You just “git er” done in the early part of the day and start with a win.
  • Experience the after burn.  Start a chain reaction. I don’t lift weights often but when I do they are full of air.  I’ve heard that one of the benefits of lifting in the morning is that you get to feel the after burn all day.   Whether you are playing guitar, writing, or
    Spark your morning and take a small direction in your dreams. You may just set off a chain reaction.. At least you can enjoy the after burn.

    Spark your morning and take a small direction in your dreams. You may just set off a chain reaction.. At least you can enjoy the after burn.

    learning a language one of the nice benefits of morning time is that that little bit of time can start a chain reaction of ideas, inspiration or linguistic connection.

  • Wake and bake.   Set the trend for the day.   One of the most “instructive” moments of my college education was a “Cartoon Kegger.”  That’s when you wake up early in the morning for cartoons and start drinking massive amounts of beer.   The theory went that if you wake up early when your brain cells are perky, you get to be a different kind of drunk and watch cartoons.  A great use of tuition money, huh?  Now I use the power of morning to bake in a different kind of goodness and set a positive trend for the day.

I became more of a morning samurai..   After my children were born, I found I had less time and energy.  You don’t have to wait to be a parent to claim the mornings.    Give it a shot.  Wake up 15 minutes early and see what you can make happen.  Catch the worm!

Get in the Fun: Learn a Foreign Language

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Use your "addictions" to learn a foreign language.  I choose brain books over manga.  It's just how I roll. :)

Use your “addictions” to learn a foreign language. I choose brain books over manga. It’s just how I roll. 🙂

It’s interesting that as I try to learn Japanese and hunt for books to read, it seems like I am attracted to the same book in different packages.   Basically I seem to be reading the same brain book but with different emphases.   This time I am reading  脳の時間割り  (Brain’s Time Table) .   This book explores how to better use knowledge about circadian rhythms in order to use your brain better.   Hey,  some one should start a website called Samurai Mind Online!

If one of your life goals is to learn a foreign language, I think it is fine to read material where you know or think you know, what the text is saying.  And, I think it helps that it should feel addictive.   These days I am attracted to Japanese language books that also have pictures.   I was attracted to the book’s bright yellow cover and the fact that it had pictures.  Plus, it offered me the promise of being able to use my brain better.  But I thought to myself, “Hey, I have oodles of Japanese brain books at home that I’ve only half way read.  Do I need another Japanese brain book?”  I left the section to scan for more books but the harpy of a book kept calling me.

One of the greatest pieces of advice I’ve gotten from All Japanese All the Time is to go for the guilty pleasures in the language that you want to learn:

Your language-learning method should make you feel guilty. It should make you feel bad. It should make you feel a little dirty. Like learning English by watching Jersey Shore. 

The book reinforces things I already practice.  I am an early riser and walker.  The author, a brain researcher, explains how the sun stimulates brain activity.

The book reinforces things I already practice. I am an early riser and walker. The author, a brain researcher, explains how the sun stimulates brain activity.  Familiarity and fun are key ingredients in learning a foreign language.  Get in the sun.  Get in the fun.

Do I really need yet another Japanese brain book?  Yes, I do.  While it helps do study words and do flashcards, etc, I  need a steady diet of brain candy in Japanese to just keep getting exposed to the language. When I read a Japanese book,  I don’t look up words.  I skip over sections when I start getting tired.  I re-read.   I read the table of contents.  I look at the pictures.

Along the way, I meet a lot of unfamiliar kanji, vocabulary, and unfamiliar grammatical structures.   But I let myself float over this because I also devote time to consciously pushing up on the language with flashcards, sentence study, Jpod 101, surusu, etc.

What’s nice is when these two approaches meet and reinforce each other.   That’s what it is all about.

 

 

WTF Samurai

I believe these are cans of oxygen to get you to the last steps of the climb up Mt. Fuji.  Sometimes you need a little help as you take it to the edge.  Make positive reaches.

Cans of oxygen to get you to the last steps of the climb up Mt. Fuji. Sometimes you need to go beyond the edge to the WTF territory.  Get lost, disoriented, and helpless. Metaphorically speaking. 🙂

My last post was about not using force and having fun.   I still stand behind what I think I said.  🙂  But I would also like to advocate for “forcing” yourself into totally new WTF environments.

I came up with that idea in a Japanese Tai Chi class as I was moving my arms and legs in all kinds of weird positions and getting totally confused by the directions.  The teacher was really nice and she said (in Japanese), “Don’t worry, even Japanese people get confused by this.”  It reminded a little bit of my old Silverspoon experience, where Khatz kept encouraging us to buy yoga, karate, exercise videos etc.   I never did get around to getting any of those videos or books but I can imagine that it is a whole new cool way to learn a new skill while immersing in a second language.  Combine body movements with learning a foreign language sounds like some kind of hybrid Brain gym exercise.

Though there’s a lot to be said for comfort and fun,  sometimes you just have to startle yourself out a plateau to develop your skill.  That’s one of the key ideas that I got from Daniel Coyle’s book,  The Little Book of  Talent.  The fact that the Zboys spent a summer skating in dried out swimming pools changed skate-boarding forever.

As AJATT.com recently reminded me, sometimes you have to go a little bit loco on whatever skill you are trying to develop:

Having crazy ideas won’t change your life. Trying even one of them will. Let a teeny tiny bit of that insanity out, like vanilla essence, just a drop, just enough to take you into so-called genius territory. And no more ;)

Go a little crazy every now and then.   Stray a little bit into the WTF territory.   Send samurai mind  a postcard.

 

 

May the Non-Force Be With You

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For a couple of bucks I left to go to a manga kissa in a different town.  Easy enough and a little adventure to boot.  You don"t have to kill yourself to try and learn something new.  Look for small but powerful shifts.

For a couple of bucks I left to go to a manga kissa in a different town. Easy enough and a little adventure to boot. You don”t have to kill yourself to try and learn something new. Look for small but powerful shifts.

I’ve been in Japan for about three weeks now.  The jetlag has gone away and I am coming to my senses more.   But I’ve noticed one strange thing.  Up until a few days, I had not bought reading material.  Reading is part of my immersion path (I don’t want to say strategy-because that sounds a little too calculated).  I go to a manga cafe almost every day and I have the opportunity to check out magazines and manga every day and I do.   There are a few bookstores close by and I’ve taken the opportunity to go browsing there a few times.  But I’ve only taken one item home.

I’m not worried.   First of all, the fact that I can stroll into a Japanese bookstore, browse, and realize that I am not interested in anything is a big victory.  I know what each section is, I can skim the titles, the table of contents, etc.  One of the things that I rediscovered through AJATT is that reading doesn’t have to look pretty.  In “Why the Way We Read Sucks” series AJATT really explores how to really get the most out of reading by avoiding the stifling obligation patterns we learn at school.  For me, reading is fun but what makes it more fun is also about making choices, rejecting,  and jumping around the text.  Browsing is a powerful reading activity.

Browsing is also a powerful review though it may not feel lik it.  Browsing is a reminder that the most important review is in real-life, in navigating, hunting, and just plain old having fun.  There is a time and place for hard work and effort in real life but fun can work too.   There is a time to be the worker ant and soldier on for the colony.   But there should be time to be like the hummingbird, flitting around and looking for nectar.  There is a time for “force” and “study” but the fun stuff reinforces it and gives it life, too.

Lots of pictures.  Information I am interested in and oodles of information I already know.  All part of letting the non-force be with you.

Lots of pictures. Information I am interested in and oodles of information I already know. All part of letting the non-force be with you.

I finally found a book at the local Numazu bookstore.  It is a visual guide to how to use an i-Pad mini.   Recently, I’ve been looking for books with a lot of pictures.    Besides the pictures, the nice thing about the iPad book is that I kind of know how to use an iPad already and I am really interested in learning how to use new apps.   I already have the inner motivation to use the knowledge in the book.   I already know a lot of vocabulary but what really helps to “read” this book is my slowly growing knowledge of kanji.  I don’t look up words, write down key sentences, etc.  I am enjoying what I am reading and that enjoyment is sealing the deal on whatever worker ant work I’ve pushed through.

Fun little book I found in a manga kissa.  This manga kissa had different offerings and was a fun, but comfortable to stretch while at the same time getting some work done.

Fun little book I found in a manga kissa. This manga kissa had different offerings and was a fun, but comfortable to stretch while at the same time getting some work done.

Currently, I am in a manga cafe in Mishima, a quick train ride away from Numazu, where I usually go to the same chain store.  But it was a little bit of adventure to find this place, the books and lighting are different.  I  have work in English to do, but with frequent breaks of intentional Japanese study and just “goofing off.” Currently, I am browsing and looking at book about the pop culture (video games, pop stars, and manga) of Japan in the 80’s.

Use your hard power.  Use your soft power.  Fly like a bee and sting like a butterfly and vice versa.  May the non-force be with you.

 

Where Does the Samurai Time Go?

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Break Through!

There are strict recycling regulations in Japan. That has a positive side and then a weird side. Sometimes people just throw their junk away on the streets and in the parks. I found this clock during my morning walk. Break through your use of time by simply tracking it!

Confession time.  I broke off from a weekend event with my family to catch up 0n work, curriculum writing, Japanese study et cetera.  I knew that I was going to lose a day because we are going to spend the day in Sanrio-land (“Hello Kitty Land”–please pray for me!)

I checked into a mangakissa (a Japanese internet cafe with unlimited “free” non-alcoholic drinks, comics and private booths with internet access) for a six hour stint.  I proceeded to “waste” most of the six hours checking Facebook, creating a non-Samurai mind twitter account, and looking at a lot of grade B movies available on the Cinema Channel.

I probably needed a day of “doing nothing.”  However,  if you find time slipping away from you and you don’t even know where it’s going, I suggest that you start recording it.  Write down what you are doing and if you can, how long you are doing it for.  It’s interesting that even though you may never sit down and total the information, it makes you aware and helps you structure your time better.

For me, it works like a money journal, a simple little notebook I kept when I decided to become financially balanced.    The books I read suggested I keep a money journal, and every month figure out how much I spent in different categories.   After a while, instead of totalling up the information, I just kept the money journal and noticed that I was being more careful with my resources just because I had to write it down.  Why buy the third pint of Ben and Jerry’s in a week when I would have to write it down?  Now, I occassionally keep a money journal when I feel my spending gets out of control.

Time is an important non-renewable resource, so it is worth occassionlly keeping track of where it goes, especiallly when you feel that you are wasting it.   I began the summer experimenting with an app called, “Eternity” ($9.99!) that allows you to create different time categories and then keep track time of how much you are doing in each as part of my project to not let my summer time slip away.  I find that I am more productive during my creative, study time if I am more like a hummingbird, flitting from flower to flower (project to project) rather than working with huge blocks of time (thanks to AJATT and timeboxing for this).   It was simply taking too much time to use the time tracking app.

I recently just experimented with a simpler method for keeping track of time.   Using my notebook  (yes, my samurai mind notebook),  I simply wrote down what I was doing on the margins. A simple few words sufficed:  wordpress, iKnow, kanjikoohii.com, Facebook….   What I found was that doing this kept me focused on getting things done.  If I had to write it down it had to be at least fun or productive.  It became more of a game to see how productively I could use my time.

Another big advantage of this is that it helps me fight the distraction of social media.   I like social media but I get lost when I use it.  I enter into it and then I forget what I was going to do.  Keeping my notebook out with some goals and a list of what I’ve done keeps me on track.

It’s a simple tool but writing down what you are doing helps you answer the eternal question:  “Where does the samurai time go?”

 

 

Rub up Against It, Samurai!

 

Find new and fun ways to "rub up" against your skill.  I like looking at advertisements--they are designed to get your attention. :)  This is a Japanese ad for air conditioners you can control with your smartphone.

Find new and fun ways to “rub up” against your skill. I like looking at advertisements–they are designed to get your attention. 🙂 This is a Japanese ad for air conditioners you can control with your smartphone.  Ads are great for rubbing up against a foreign language.

Learning about guitar has been a lot like learning a foreign language to me.  This means that I get many opportunities to panic. 🙂  I often feel like I don’t understand what is going on and that I need to understand everything all at once.   What I really need to do is to STSU (Shut the Samurai Up) and rub up against the skill instead of trying have it all at once.

I’ve been pretty systematic about just trying something with guitar.  I’m following AJATT’s philosophy of “Getting Over Zero.”   “Just.Do.Something.”  My pull is just to stop playing because I haven’t mastered guitar, so anything that I can do for even five minutes is a huge victory.

These days when I am away from the guitar (these days at the mangakissa), I’ve been watching at least five minutes of David Wallman’s “Theory and Improvisation” lessons on Jamplay.com.  When I have access to my guitar and computer I either learn a small part of a lesson from Jamplay or review lessons.

I use these cards to help target my practice.   I simply follow the link to the lesson, watch the video or simply play using the supplementary materials on Jamplay.  Just one simple way to "rub up on" a skill/game I thought I couldn't play.

I use these cards to help target my practice. I simply follow the link to the lesson, watch the video or simply play using the supplementary materials on Jamplay. Just one simple way to “rub up on” a skill/game I thought I couldn’t play.

To take a lot of the angst of choosing which lesson to review, I create web-based flashcards using surusu.   I create flashcards simply by using the titles and links to Jamplay lessons.   Surusu mixes up the cards and as I pass them and grade how successfully I’ve remembered the skill or lesson.  The cards come up again sooner (hard cards) or later (easily mastered cards).    Having the cards prevents me from having the wasteful pity party of deciding what would be the right card to review.   Since I have the guitar strapped around my neck, I also just “fool around” and try to make cool sounds.

If you are overwhelmed by a potential skill, rub up against it instead trying to tackle it.   Right now, I am at a mangakissa in Japan.   It’s a fun way to have the office space that I have in the states.   I used to be overwhelmed by the choices of Japanese  manga, magazines, and entertainment that lay outside of the little cubicle where I have my computer.  So I would be here in the heart of Japan, studying my Japanese flashcards but also checking Facebook every fifteen minutes.  Now I don’t care if I understand everything.   I look at the pictures or I look at a complicated kanji and just gaze at it~or not.  Life can be a lot more fun when you are just rubbing up against it.

Here are some tips for rubbing up against your desired skills:

  • use time limits: set a timer for five minutes: How bad could five minutes be?
  • find more opportunities to rub up against the skills:  What are the different modes, podcasts, visuals
  • dont’t let rubbing up against a skill become a threat.  Have fun
  • find light ways to be around what you don’t understand .  Look at the pictures of a manga.  Celebrate what you do know.

I’m getting a lot more out of the paid websites (Jamplay, Japanesepod101.com, iKnow, etc) because rather than beating myself I’ve decided to rub up against the skills I want to have.   This is a lot better than the months (and probably years) that I did not use these websites because of my perfectionism.  There is definitely a role for going gang busters at a skill, but if perfectionism is stopping you from even trying you need to “rub up against it.”

Life is short.  Rub up against it.

Take it to the Edge and Empty Out

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I believe these are cans of oxygen to get you to the last steps of the climb up Mt. Fuji.  Sometimes you need a little help as you take it to the edge.  Make positive reaches.

I believe these are cans of oxygen to get you to the last steps of the climb up Mt. Fuji. Sometimes you need a little help as you take it to the edge. Make positive reaches.

In order to have something, you actually need to leave it.  In order to remember something,  you need to take it to the point of almost forgetting. In order to listen to the music, you need to have silence.

Yep, I guess I ended up sounding Zen-ish.  But it’s seriously something that has been going through my mind lately.   In order to have something, sometimes the best thing to do is to leave it or at least have it almost beyond your reach.

The easiest way that this comes to me is in terms of flashcards.  I have a very basic flashcard program on my iPhone and iPad called Midori.   The flashcard program is very basic in my view because it for the most part studying words in isolation is not the way to go. (See AJATT on this one.)  However, I have come really try to use cracks in time and sometimes hate to waste a minute so, in a pinch, I will have some fun with the flashcards.  (Speaking of a pinch–on the iPad version of Midori if you “pinch out” a flashcard that you are reviewing you can see sample sentences.)

But is really important to remember to forget.   I make it a point to stop studying cards when they start to repeat.  If a card starts to repeat too soon, you are drilling to kill.    You are fracking your mind.  I prefer to wait, look around, have some fun and come back to the card when it is more of a “reach” instead of a mindless repetition.    Daniel Coyle, author the talent code, and many other writers speak about the effects of positive reaches.   You want to consistently go towards facts, skills, ideas that are just beyond your reach.

I also think in terms of emptying.  To get full, you need to empty.  If you want to soak up water with a sponge, you need to squeeze it out.   If you want to hear music better, you need to have silence.

Sign for cyclists on the beach.  Slow down.  I think to speed up, you need to be strategic about having opportunities to slow down.

Sign for cyclists on the beach. Slow down. I think to speed up, you need to be strategic about having opportunities to slow down.  Forget to remember.

I’ve incorporated this into my morning exercises in Numazu.   I walk out with my iPod, listening to a podcast or Japanese music.  I am staying in an area called 千本浜, and I fast-walk in a shady area filled with thousands of pine trees.   I tack my way back through the beach (don’t get too inspired–it’s concrete lined beach 🙂 ) and stop at a rocky point and do Chinese exercises called Nei Kung.  I used to listen to music, but I was starting to get annoyed and decided to turn off the music and just listen to the sound of the waves.  Or not.

I think that silence is important.  It’s another way of taking things to the edge by emptying out.  I don’t think there should be any rules or techniques about how you do this, but I think it is important to be cognizant of when music, words, and information start to be noise.

Take it to the edge.   Empty out to fill up.  Forget to remember.

Back In Japan: “Getting Over Zero”

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I’m  back in Japan for a big part of the summer.  The jet lag hasn’t hit  yet, my wife is busy, so I’m in my home away from home—the  Aprecio manga kissa.

I managed to stay in a Japanese bubble for a large part of the trip.   I recently bought an iPad mini.  Part of my ‘packing’ involved loading the iPad with Japanese music and podcasts.  It was kind of like stepping into a time machine because my computer loaded in a lot of podcasts that I hadn’t listened to since 2009.

Re-discovered this.  It's interesting that materials for Japanese wanting to learning English can also help you learn Japanese.

Re-discovered this. It’s interesting that materials for Japanese wanting to learning English can also help you learn Japanese.

One that I particularly enjoyed was G+ 英語館 (Eigokan) a play on the Japanese word for movie theatre, ‘Eigakan’  (映画館).  This is a program that uses movies to teach English to Japanese viewers.  Each episode concentrates on two English phrases from the movie.   A bilingual English speaker explains in English and Japanese.   What’s nice is that even though it is geared towards learning English, a lot of the explanation is in Japanese so I get exposure to Japanese phrases.   The biggest selling point is that the episodes were interesting enough to break up the times when I woke up during the flight.

The Youtube clip has a lot more English because it includes an interview with Vigo Mortenson.  However, as I watched this, I realized I have made some progress with my Japanese.  Teaching and raising children has been intense so my Japanese “study” usually consists of 30 minutes of intentional study in the mornings, followed by little bursts of immersion when I can get it throughout the day through music, etc.   It’s not necessarily “All Japanese All the Time.”  However, I am the living embodiment of AJATT’s article, “Stop Trying to Do Things Well:  Getting Over Zero.”  Khatz writes:

Say no to 0. Do something. Anything. Any. Thing. Now. Play that Japanese. But don’t play Japanese that’s good for you. Don’t play something you “should” learn. Don’t should all over yourself — you do not have mental or physical bandwidth to do the right thing, let alone a right thing or even a good thing, all you can do is something. Don’t even bother to make sure the volume is up all the way; don’t bother make sure it loops forever; just play it. Now.

So yes, Eigokan had a lot of English.   But I was tired, bored, and on a thirteen hour flight.  This little podcast was entertaining enough to keep me interested in between heavy naps.   As I watched, I noticed myself doing a couple of things:

  • checking the Japanese subtitles to see how they were translated
  • waiting anxiously for the hosts Japanese explanation of phrases that I already knew well in English

During my time here in Japan there are actually a lot of things that I have to do in English:  writing projects, courses I have to plan etc.   Luckily I am in an environment where I am constantly “Getting Over Zero.”

Jet-laggedly yours, Samurai Juan.

Reset Samurai: Start Your Morning with A Power Hour

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Take time every morning to create, take a little dip into the "impossible" skill, brainstorm, dream, and create.  I promise it will be good for you, the people around you, and even the earth.

Take time every morning to create, take a little dip into the “impossible” skill, brainstorm, dream, and create. I promise it will be good for you, the people around you, and even the earth.

I knew I was getting closer to my Kentucky home when I started to notice the limestone shouldering the edges of the relatively lonely highway.  I was there to visit friends and family and be social but one of the first things I did every morning was to go to the Common Grounds quiet cafe and spend a little samurai hour, writing, studying, and spending a little time re-creating myself.

One of the best things you can do for yourself, your loved ones, and the earth in general is to find time for your samurai self to create.   Spending some time brainstorming, writing, playing, studying, or even walking or running in the morning works on several levels.   In one way it is like hitting the reset button.  It’s a fresh start to create and imagine.   Or it’s a chance to put another brick in whatever fun project you are up to in your mad labs.

What I’ve also discovered that this time is also good for the other people around me.  They may never be exposed to anything that I’ve written or studied, but they are exposed to the real me.  (In a non-creepy way. 🙂 ) If I’ve taken even just a few minutes to create, I am more present.  I am more pleasant.  It may seem selfish to spend some time away by yourself but the best thing that you can do for your friends and family is spend a little time re-creating yourself.

Back when I was doing an Japanese immersion service called Silverspoon, I did suggested morning “sprints” that included an affirmation (in a non-new-agey non-creepy way) and a pretty intense burst of Japanese study/play.   There’s something great about waking and baking in the freshness of a new skill or just heading in a new direction with brainstorming or writing.

Whatever you do, don’t get caught up in how this morning time is supposed to look.  Don’t wait for the perfect office space to get started.  Head to the cafe.  Head to the quiet hallway.  If you don’t have an hour take fifteen minutes.  If you don’t have fifteen minutes, take five.

Do it for yourself.  Do it for the children.  Spend a little morning time in your mad labs and power your day.

 

Samurai Getting it from All Directions

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Look back, look forward, look around.   Sometimes an all directions approach helps you move forward.   Think cross-train.

Look back, look forward, look around. Sometimes an all directions approach helps you move forward. Think cross-train.

I loved it when Daniel Coyle, author of The Little Book of Talent and The Talent Code, mentioned the skateboarders highlighted in the documentary Dogtown and Zboys.   These outsiders and misfits changed skateboarding forever.   Part of how Coyle explains how they developed their talent was that these skaters “trained” in ever changing environments.   The Zboys were influenced by surfing but also learned how to skate streets,  irrigation ditches, and in a year of drought a plethora of dried out pools.   Each change of environment added to their repertoire and talent.

The takeaway for me is to make sure to get it from all directions.  For example, I came to Kentucky from Puerto Rico at the age of eight and did not know very much English.  (I had the advantage of having a mom that already spoke English).   I went to school and was assigned a speech therapist in addition to regular instruction.   I also fell in love with comic books, specially Richie Rich, Casper, and Archie comic books.   I also grooved on “Sesame Street” and” Electric Company.”   I listened to AM radio.  I watched “Name that Tune.”  I was getting language from all directions.  A cat named Khatz did the same thing with Japanese at an older age and built a website called All Japanese All the Time.

Change your environments and approaches but not so much that you actually don’t move forward.   For example, I’ve taken a very dogged approach to music theory.  I spend five minutes every day moving forward on a little piece of music theory from Theory for the Contemporary Guitarist.  Is it the best book on theory for guitarists?  I don’t know.  Probably not.   At the end of each page, I hunt for youtube videos on the topic and see what other people have said about the various music theory topics.  I’m learning a foreign language here and I know that to learn it, I will need to approach it from many directions.   Every now and then something makes sense.   Victory! 🙂

I also make sure that there is time where I am playing and watching others play.  The point of practice is getting to the point of no mind, a concept I learned through continuous viewing of The Last Samurai.  🙂   Have fun strategizing and playing so when the self-doubt and “I am not worthy”  assassins come to kill you in the dark, you can have your Tom Cruise moment and come at them from all directions.  Peace!

 

 

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