Tag: learning

What I’ve learned this week

Already almost halfway through a first month! How are you doing?

One of my general objectives this year is to get more curious. I know, I know, having too many goals at the start of the year is an almost surefire way to ditch all of them. However, being curious is more of a practice and state of mind that can only benefit every sphere of my life. 

Curiosity killed the cat, but satisfaction brought it back!

So here are a few things I learned this week :

  1. Entity VS incremental theories of intelligence. I’m currently reading The Art Of Learning by Josh Waitzkin and it crystallized what I had generally understood here and there – the way we approach learning early on has a tremendous effect on how we approach a lot of things in life. Very simply put, entity theory refers to attributing success to an innate and fairly unchanging level of ability, whereas incremental, or learning theory refers to associating it to effort and improvement. The former focuses on accomplishments, which can in turn lead to prioritizing the things that come naturally and shy away from what would require growth. The latter encourages practice and is more likely to have failure as a normal part of the learning process. For example, incredibly lucky to understand things quickly, I went through primary and secondary school pretty easily, without having to study all that much. When schooling became more complex and I didn’t understand new material as easily, my performance dropped drastically. Same with drawing – I was told I was talented from a young age, but I never had the drive to practice and get better – I just drew so much it happened on its own. For a while. Once perfectionism also soured the fun of it, art became a source of anxiety when it had once been a core part of my life. I’m only now realizing how crippling it has become, hence my desire to go back to basics, and to try new things, especially if they feel uncomfortable.
  2. It can easily take several days to recover from one bad mental health day. The last part of 2024 was a significant challenge, and being now fairly well-acquainted with grief, I’m aware that it can creep up on you any time it wants, for no particular reason. It did so over a week ago, and while things were already much better the next day, it took almost five more to start feeling like myself again. My therapist said it’s normal! It’s important to let yourself feel the hard stuff too, and to exercise self-compassion through it. That is why I haven’t taken the time to follow another Skillshare class this week. 
  3. Speaking of classes, I learned that a one-line drawing, of florals at least, should be started from the bottom, and that my left-handedness is definitely going to be a challenge in taking art classes! Some of the exercises, which I’ve been repeating almost daily, have been challenging because of it – I start them in the right direction but my brain gets confused as I progress. Clearly something I need to practice further!

What have you learned lately that tickled your mind?

Making Learning A Regular Habit

Hello again!! I hope your weekend is starting on a positive note 🙂

Time to get a bit candid in this one!

Fear of failure has been a significant struggle of mine for far too long – at least as far as mid-teenage years. Half-blessed, half-cursed with often picking up new skills easily, but not always, it has discouraged me from putting more time into the ones that took more effort.

It has unfortunately also affected my art, to the point where the purpose of starting anything at all was lost in the apprehension of it not being perfect, which is quite an obstacle to thriving in general. Skills have eroded during that dormancy as well, so I’m currently unable to create at the same level I once did.

And so! In order to go back to basics, and probably learn several things along the way as I was largely self-taught, courses and tutorials will become regular items in my schedule.

I currently have access to Skillshare until May and will take advantage of the teaching format it offers, but the hope is to diversify and hopefully include in-person classes as well eventually. Suggestions are also always open!

For now, the 5 first classes I have bookmarked :

  • Learn To Draw : Daily Practices To Improve Your Drawing Skills, by Gabrielle Brickey (1h24m)
  • Learn To Draw : A Comprehensive Intro To Drawing Foundation & Style, by Mimi Chao (4h22m)
  • Mobile Photography – Your Complete Guide, by Phil Ebiner (3h3m)
  • iPhone Photography : How To Take Pro Photos On Your iPhone, by Dale McManus (55m)
  • One-Line Drawing : Cultivate Calm And Creativity, by Altea Alessandroni (30m)

The current plan is to complete one class or course a week, but as you can see, the length varies quite a bit, so that might change!

I obviously can’t really share the contents of those classes here, but I can share the results and my own highlights 🙂

***

School has been fun for me, mostly when it involved learning theory and understanding principles. But art-related classes require the application of skills that my brain cannot “cheat” its way through, so while the subjects often interested me, the fear of feeling inadequate, of not succeeding as quickly as I felt I should, always stopped me from both learning new techniques, and progressing.

Perfectionism actually doesn’t help anything.

So this year, let’s make things imperfectly, rather than not doing them at all!

 

Powered by WordPress & Theme by Anders Norén

Social Media Auto Publish Powered By : XYZScripts.com