https://www.youtube.com/shorts/xOA7dKSThWY Hey! Welcome to my fourth entry at MC Voices, today I will be showing…
A really long time ago when I was taking Physics at Columbia University in New York, my professor implored us to study Physics a little bit each day, even if just to read a section of the text or review some notes. He said we shouldn’t try to set aside 3 hours to ‘study Physics’ on Wednesday morning or carve out 2 hours on Friday afternoon, no, the better way was to commit to doing a minimum of 30 minutes every day. It would be impossible to pass the course, he said, if you merely attended the lectures, did the assignments, and showed up for the exam. You had to study Physics every day. That was the only way to make it stick.
It’s the same thing now at MC. In the Figure Drawing class, one of the requirements is to keep a daily sketchpad. The point is to draw in the pad every day. It’s hard to draw in the sketch pad every day. However, it is in fact tremendously useful to be in the habit of drawing all the time.
A great artist was once asked what was needed for inspiration. He said that inspiration came after five days of doing painter’s exercises. What he meant was that if one worked at developing one’s skills every day, then when needed, these skills would come in very handy.
Definitely this is true: when I make sure to draw, paint or sculpt every day, it becomes a habit and gets very familiar. When I need to render something, I have the skill to do it. When I need to mix the right color, it’s just a matter of combining a few things in the right proportions. And the ideas keep flowing, there seems to be something interesting around every turn. But if I don’t do art for even a few days, it becomes so much more difficult to just jump right in again.
It was the same in yoga class last semester at MC. Going to class was great, and there was momentum in that. But the professor encouraged us to develop a home practice if we really wanted to get anywhere. In order for a home practice to stick, though, it has to becomes a part of your lifestyle, every day.
And so maybe that’s the key: do something over and over again so frequently that it becomes automatic, and then it’s something in your ‘toolbox’ which you have available to use whenever you need it. It becomes a habit. It becomes a part of you. And something which you do every day.
One of my English professors always said that it takes 10,000 hours of practice to master anything, that little bit every day will add up quickly.