One of those days
Apr. 17th, 2014 12:41 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
Not, oddly, one of those days where you wonder about whether your continued existence on the planet will ever produce anything tangible and worthwhile, or whether you are instead doomed to spend the entirety of the rest of your life looking at cat pictures on the internet*.
No, one of those super productive days.
I’m wondering if I need to write myself a to-do list for every day when I’m not working because the effect was astonishing.
On my list was the following:
- Clean some house
- Practice Guitar
- Practice Piano
- Order power supply connector
- Bottle cider
- Garden
- ?Print sepsis card
And apart from the sepsis card all of it got done and some other bits and bobs. Also I listened to lots of music, which is a bonus.
I actually managed to spend a good hour practicing music, which is astonishing to me. I have absolutely no commitment to these things, have never been a big one for practicing (or studying) so for me to hit a point where I was actually keeping playing because I damn well wanted to get the piece of music to sound at least roughly right was pretty pleasing.
Also I had a sudden understanding of how awful it must have been for my piano (or paino, which seems a strangely apt typo) to have listened to my terrible, terrible, timing.
* Which for various personal/health reasons was how I spent most of yesterday. Well, not cat-pictures per-se, but they might as well have been.
One of those days was originally published on Mostly lemon based
Originally published at Mostly lemon based. You can comment here or there.
no subject
Date: 2014-04-17 05:47 pm (UTC)Oof.
As for music stuff, I'm good at it because I've been doing it for over twenty years, and I play with people a few times a week (band practice and at least one session). If I *only* do that, I can coast, but if I want to get better I have to practice, and I really do need extra motivation or self-management to do it, usually. It's especially important now I'm trying to learn both singing and tenor guitar -- it's so long since I've been a beginner!
I've found that it helps to have a goal or project ("I want to get THIS song to passable level"). For reference, my 'okay' level on my little chart is 15 minutes -- in 15 minutes of focused practice, I can either get all the way through my vocal exercises, OR make serious headway on a new fiddle tune, OR get my fingers tired on guitar ('cause I'm still wimpy at that). My 'excellent' time is 45 minutes or higher, which seems to be about the limit of my ability to focus on one instrument. Unless I'm at fiddle camp where there's lots of new exciting stuff to learn, or I'm playing with someone else, I just kinda peter out after 45 minutes no matter what.
I know fancy dedicated musickers will talk about spending four hours a day practicing, but my last three months are living proof that 15 minutes almost every day can give you significant improvement. My guitar and singing (where I'm still in the steep learning curve bit) have improved A LOT since January when I started my chart!
no subject
Date: 2014-04-17 09:41 pm (UTC)Also, we're not planning to live here for a long time, because we want to live in the Do Not Enter house in Astoria... Well, okay, we just want the land.
As for the music stuff, indeed. I am finding it easier in a way to practice the piano because I can actually play something akin to a tune. The guitar stuff doesn't sound like a tune yet, just assorted notes in a specific order (Which technically, I suppose, is sort of a tune). Anyhow, I have to practice otherwise honestly, what's the point in carrying a piano 100s of miles across the ocean?
Oh, and Units? that's interesting. I don't quite know what a yard of gravel is - is that 1 cubic yard of gravel? In which case I'd say that it's more than that - because the bag of gravel that was lowered into our (front, sadly) garden by crane was more than 1mx1mx1m (which is close enough to a yard as makes no odds).
no subject
Date: 2014-04-17 09:46 pm (UTC)The Do Not Enter house could be scarier! It could say "Do not enter OR KNOCK DOWN"
no subject
Date: 2014-04-17 09:54 pm (UTC)Weight/volume conversions are all challenging. I recall when I discovered that US cooking was mainly done by volume instead of by weight, I found that such an odd concept. I now, incidentally, generally think it works really well - but did have to be convinced by a process of actually cooking.
* My wife informs me that she's never heard of this, which means I suppose that you might not have heard of this, thus: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yard_of_ale
no subject
Date: 2014-04-17 09:58 pm (UTC)I *much* prefer cooking by volume, though I believe that for some higher end, finicky baking weight is better. I was quite flabbergasted when visiting friends in Chester and I learned they never, ever, ever cooked with simple volumetric units (i.e., 3 to 4 or 2 to 3, which I use a lot).
no subject
Date: 2014-04-18 07:34 am (UTC)It was baking that gave me pause in the concept of cooking by volume. However, these days I'm happy with either. Most European cookbooks will give you weights not volumes though, so our kitchen is equipped with both scales and cups :)
no subject
Date: 2014-04-18 05:43 pm (UTC)I've recently been cooking from a set of Chinese cookbooks by a British author, so everything's in weights. It's not a problem at all, because it's not about baking so rough guesses are fine, but now I think about it it's kind of weird -- they changed little bits of Harry Potter for US publication so poor US children wouldn't be confused, but when they publish European cookbooks in the US they never convert 'em to volume measures!