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Hi Everyone,

The journey of musicianship is a journey into your own emotional complexities. Performing can reveal you to yourself in new ways, and that can sometimes be scary and embarrassing. Learning anything can be a powerful mirror that helps you see different parts of yourself more clearly. No one likes feeling like a fool or a newbie.

In this video I discuss the idea of shame in musicianship. Present shame is the feeling of "I need to play this perfectly" or "I need to know everything about this concept before I use it to write music" or "I need to have this technique down before I can call myself a real musician." These are all varieties of present shame.

Retroactive shame is the feeling that "wow I was so confident about that performance a few years ago, but I didn't know how melodic minor works and I did it wrong"  or "I didn't realize I was playing the wrong chord in that spot" or even "wow I wasn't singing in tune when I thought I was back then." These are all examples of times when you didn't feel shame in the moment, but you do now after you've learned more.

These are complicated feelings and I'm not going to say "DON'T HAVE THESE FEELINGS" because, well, how is that a request you can possibly consider? These feelings are often uncontrollable.

What I can offer is an opportunity to consider that this shame is a small facet of the whole person and the whole musician. Every musician can look back and cringe at certain aspects of their musicianship or even feel shame or embarrassment about a current lack of skill or understanding.

But the positive feedback loop looks like this: the more you accept this feeling as a normal part of musicianship development, the less power it will have over you. The more you see it as an aspect of musicianship that shouldn't be removed, but nestled in alongside all the other variety feelings you have, the less you'll focus on it as a negative thing and the less it will take over.

Essentially, thinking "I shouldn't be having this feeling" can cause the biggest feedback loop. Acknowledge that feeling AND all the other feelings that shame is blocking - be proud of your progress, your increased finesse of your songs or your technique, your greater awareness of how to play your instrument and write music, and so on. Because musicianship is a journey, you will never stop learning as long as you keep trying and being mindful.

In the video I give a description of a graph that basically looks like this:


This is a weird concept to bring up, but SO important. If this lesson rang true for you or hit a nerve or made you uncomfortable, let's talk about it in the comments or on the community forum!

Check out the Lesson Archive for more Practice Thoughts 

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Files

Practice Thoughts- Shame and Holistic Musicianship_v01.mov

This is "Practice Thoughts- Shame and Holistic Musicianship_v01.mov" by Scott Paul Johnson on Vimeo, the home for high quality videos and the people who...

Comments

LoungeActor

Scott- your video was what I needed today! Just yesterday I played at my first Blues Jam down at our local pub. The event coordinator threw 6 of us together - we played three songs - and I S-U-C-K-E-D!! I thought I was prepared- but playing live in a big room w/ unfamiliar songs, house-amp and musicians is not something one can prepare for unless you just do it and learn going forward. Just like you said. One can never get good at playing live if you never play live. I was embarrassed. Today, I am over it. Thanks

Scott Paul Johnson

Yeah! That’s a weird situation! Six people at once is a lot! I’d write down each individual thing you learned from that experience and think about ways you could practice to make the next time easier. If you’re willing to go back and keep trying, that’s the difference between progress and giving up.

Dan Rolander

I love this "lesson". Personally, I need more of this. For many years I have been a basement player, learning songs and making my own recordings and sharing them with friends, but I really struggle with playing with others in a live situation and the shame of feeling like I played badly when doing it. I know I need to just put myself into more of those situations to feel more comfortable, but it's not easy. I appreciate the emotional support. Thanks, Scott.

Scott Paul Johnson

I feel like the practice thoughts are my place to tackle the stuff that every musician ought to learn, but teachers don't usually consider it part of the curriculum. I'm glad you appreciate this lesson!