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Attic Investigations Club
  • HOME
  • Table of Contents
  • Chapters
    • Grandmother's Castle
    • Cake Bake, Sleep Over
    • Attic Investigators
    • Who, What, When, Where
    • East Overshoe
    • Mustang in the Barn
    • Discombobulation
    • Bedtime Lessons
    • Celestia
    • Mysterious Script
    • Secret Room
    • Protect the Puffins
    • Thing-a-ma-jig & Which-a-ma-callits
    • Nooks full of BOOKS!
    • Bubble Room
    • The Guardian
    • Odd Ouija
    • Search for Answers at the Library
    • Coddiwomple
    • Chapter 19
    • Chapter 20
    • 2nd Challenge, the second room
    • Hope, Faith, Charity
    • Chapter 23
    • Chapter 24
    • Chapter 25
    • Chapter 26
    • Chapter 27
    • Chapter 28
    • Chapter 29
    • Chapter 30
    • Chapter 31
    • Chapter 32
    • Chapter 33
    • Chapter 34
    • Chapter 35
    • Chapter 36
    • Chapter 37
    • Bob's your Uncle, Jaimie's your Aunt
    • Bubbleverse Worlds
    • Mystery in the Steamer Trunk
    • A Verona Mystery
    • Mystery Puzzle Boxes
    • Valley of Trolls
    • Chest and the Key
    • Felix Pickles Cheshire Cheese
    • The Book of Mysteries and Investigations
    • Rat and Parrot
    • The Shadow People
    • Save the Tawny Frogmouth
    • Tiger Lily and her Pajamas
    • Peanuts for Stella
    • Mysterious Key
    • Banned Bunnies
    • Chip and Mimi
    • Sister Rose and Rabbi Shapiro
    • Nanny Doll Collection
    • Limpy and Stimpy
    • Mr. Jones and Mr. Jenkins
    • The Majestic Chest
    • The Crystal Cave
    • Grumpy King
    • Mad Hatter Bunny
    • Mrs. Crabernathy
    • Gobbledegook
    • I Remember
    • Pudding
    • Kumbaya
    • Milky Way Galaxy
    • Oh Fudge
    • Yin Yang
    • Confucius
    • Women in History
    • Phase Two
  • Alien Earthlings
    • Bee Humingbird
    • Mantis Shrimp
    • Aye-aye
    • Axolotl
    • Jerboa
    • Murder of Crows
    • Greenland Shark
    • Narwhal
    • Platypus
    • Pink Fairy Armadillo
    • Pangolin
    • Tawny Frogmouth
    • Shoebill
    • Bullet Ant
    • Naked Mole Rat
    • Saiga Antelope
    • Hickory Horned Devil
    • Honduran White Bat
    • Scaly-Foot Snail
    • Kookaburra
    • Humphead
    • Nautilus
    • Aardvark
    • Jesus Lizard
    • Bewitching Mason Bees
    • Giant Manta Ray
    • Sea Angel
    • Mandrill
    • RED Fire Ant
    • Budapest Short-Faced Tumbler
    • Blobfish
    • Elephant Shrew
    • Colugo
    • Frigate Bird
    • Manatee
    • Tenrec
    • Tasmanian Devil
    • Sea Cucumber
    • Dumbo Octopus
    • Sea Bunny
    • Sea Pig
    • Angler Fish
    • Sunfish
    • Sea Spider
    • Tree Kangaroo
    • Poodle Moth
    • Immortal Jellyfish
    • Star-nosed Mole
    • Kakapo
  • Be all YOU can be!
    • DIRECTORY
    • Astronaut Collins
    • Suffragettes
    • Stars are...
    • Frequency Hopping
    • The Bi-Plane Pilot
    • Her Deepness
    • Human Computer
    • Daughter of the Dragon
    • Rosie the Riveter
    • Toshiko Akiyoshi
    • Louisa May Alcott
    • Maria Tallchief
    • Susan B. Anthony
    • Sojourner Truth
    • Katharine Graham
    • Ruth Bader Ginsburg
    • Indira Gandhi
    • Golda Meir
    • Taylor Swift
    • Estée Lauder
    • Maryam Mirzakhani
    • Sacagawea
    • Catherine the Great
    • Mother Teresa
    • Amilia Earhart
    • Princess Diana
    • Rosa Parks
    • Marie Curie
    • Ada Lovelace
    • Margaret Hamilton
  • Things, Bits & Bobs
    • Wilhelmina's Wardrobe
      • Delilah's Dress
      • Umbrella
      • Wellies
    • Trudi's Steamer Trunk
      • Dolly's Doll
      • Bobby's Baseball Glove
      • Jeanne's Red Jacket Skates
      • Eddy's Teddy Bear
      • Christmas Ornaments
      • Quack !
      • Photo Album
      • Jacks
      • The Rose
      • Leica Camera
      • Passport
      • Italy Map
      • Cap Gun & Holster
      • Recipe Box
      • Love Letters
      • Tea Set
      • Lost Keys
      • The Journal
    • Tippi's Typewriter
    • Patty's Painting
    • Hollie's Horsey
    • Chester's Chess Set
    • Rodolfo's Golf Clubs
    • Frank's Fishing Rod
    • Chugga Chugga Choo Choo
    • Molly's Doll House
    • Susan's Sewing Machine
    • Verona Street Sign
    • Metal Detector
  • The COSMOS
  • Tree of LIFE
  • Buddha
  • Practice = Happiness
  • Friendship
  • CONFUOUS QUOTES
  • ZEN
  • Solve the puzzel
  • Odd Relationships
    • Goby and Pistol Shrimp
    • Woolly Bats and Pitcher plants
    • Clown Fish and Anemones
  • CONTACT
Attic Investigations Club

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Practice = Happiness

The Power of Progress

Think of learning like building a tower out of blocks. Each time you practice, you add a new block. Your tower will not be perfect on day one. But over time, it gets taller and stronger. Practice gives you the power to do new things!

While practice might not necessarily make your skills perfect, it certainly is still an important piece of the learning puzzle. By balancing methods that include mental rehearsal, hands-on practice, exploration, and other forms of learning, you can optimize skill development and become a more efficient learner. 

In a world that conditions us to obsess about outcomes while encouraging us to multitask rather than focus on a single goal, it’s easy to undervalue the importance of practice.

Practice is the key to true inner peace and contentment. By concentrating on specific tasks rather than spending our energy worrying about future outcomes or harping on our past “mistakes,” we’re able to be more focused and more present.

In The Practicing Mind, pianist Thomas Sterner brilliantly explains how cultivating discipline and focus through practice helps us create a frictionless path to achieving our goals — and experience the joy that comes as a result.

Let’s jump in and explore what it means to practice and how we can shift our perspective to view practice, not perfection, as the ultimate goal.

From Learning to Practicing

One way to move into focusing on the process rather than the result is to understand the difference between “practice” and “learning.”

“The word ‘practice’ implies the presence of awareness and will,” Sterner explains. “The word ‘learning’ does not. When we practice something, we are involved in the deliberate repetition of a process with the intention of reaching a specific goal. The words ‘deliberate’ and ‘intention’ are key here because they define the difference between actively practicing something and passively learning it.”

Learning is wonderful, but practice is a bit different. Practice involves setting an intention and being deliberate. It is the process of picking a goal and choosing to continually apply steady effort to reach it.

Focus on the Work

Despite his steady effort to become an accomplished musician, Sterner notes that it was playing golf that really helped him understand the dynamics of practice.

While working on his swing, he began to notice that an attachment to results (which we can’t control) rather than to the process (which we can control) is what causes us to feel perpetually discontented.

This is really the essence of the whole book: “When you let go of your attachment to the object you desire and make your desire the experience of staying focused on working toward that object, you fulfill that desire in every minute that you remain patient with your circumstances. There is no reason not to be patient. There is no effort, no ‘trying to be patient’ here. Patience is just a natural outgrowth of your shifted perspective.

“This shift in perspective is very small and subtle on the one hand, but it has enormous freeing power. No task seems too large to undertake. Your confidence goes way up, as does your patience with yourself. You are always achieving your goal, and there are no mistakes or time limits to create stress.”

In other words, when we focus our attention only on a desired outcome, we’ll experience stress, anxiety, lack of presence, and diminished performance.

But when our primary desire is to stay focused on the process of working toward a goal, we’ll experience presence, engagement, and increased performance. This makes it much more likely we will achieve the outcome we desire with “frictionless ease.”

It’s a subtle, but vital, shift to use our goals as rudders — occasionally checking in to make sure we’re on course — and focus our energy on the here and now of our practicing minds rather than on our wandering minds that are always looking ahead.

Practice Mindfully

In order to enhance our ability to home in on the benefits of practice, we need to exercise our minds.

Like many great teachers, Sterner believes that meditation is one of the most effective ways to shift our attention, free us from the confines of our ego and its attachments, and fine-tune our presence.

“Though there are certainly a number of ways to accomplish [freeing ourselves from the confines of ego], the most effective method for spontaneously and effortlessly creating this alignment is meditation,” he writes.

But Sterner also provides another way to rock it, explaining that we can create a practicing mind by calling in the “DOC” — do, observe, and correct.

Here’s how he explains the technique:

“If, for example, you feel you tend to worry too much, then try to apply DOC to your actions. When you notice yourself fretting over something, you have accomplished the do portion. Now observe the behavior that you want to change. In your observation of yourself worrying, you separate yourself from the act of worrying.

“Now realize that the emotions you are experiencing have no effect on the problem over which you’re fretting. Release yourself from the emotions as best as you can — that is the correction portion.”

When you’re feeling off your game, the first step is to do something. It can be an action as simple as noticing a behavior.

Once you’ve parsed the problem, observe it like a good instructor — objectively and without judgment or emotion. Check in and ask yourself if the behavior is working well or if you need to adjust some things to get back on track.

Finally, correct what’s not working. Again, do this without emotion — other than perhaps some enthusiasm for realizing you’re cultivating the mojo of a practicing mind!

Don’t postpone feeling joy until you’ve reached your goals or fulfilled your dream. Learn to enjoy the process and you’ll open yourself up to the rewards available every step along the way.


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