All my life, I’ve stuck to the things I can easily master. My brother made me read a book about this when our dad was dying, almost three years ago to the day. We were in an airport waiting for our flight to or from our last visit with Dad—I’m not sure which, as it blurs now. I told him how I liked playing Sudoku puzzles, but only if they were easy or medium: the hard sometimes stumped me and the expert always did. He said he read a book and that I had to read it. He then went on and on so much that I said, “Fine! I’ll download the derned thing!” I did and I read it and I was not happy. With me.
But
that was in 2012, before I knew how to be a failure. I’ve failed so much since then, that I’ve
decided it’s my new hobby.
The
book my brother made me read, Mindset,The New Psychology of Success, by Carol Dweck, a Stanford
University psychologist, talked about two mindsets: Fixed and Growth. Reading this book in 2012, I realized that I
was definitely of the Fixed Mindset. I
was good at what I was good at and didn’t try things I wasn’t already good at.
If I accidentally got sucker punched into trying something I wasn’t magically a
natural at, well, I quit. Quickly.
After
reading this book, I did only Hard and Expert Sudoku puzzles for a while. Sometimes I didn’t complete them in one
sitting and sometimes I had to start over.
But you know what? Now I do only
Expert, as I can do the Hard without a blink.
Sometimes I still fail and have to start over. Newsflash: The world does not end.
Moving
to a Growth mindset is a conscious effort with every step. Instinctively, I gravitate to Fixed and don’t
try things I’m not good at. It’s just
sorta my thing. In work, relationships,
hobbies, and the world in general, I gravitate towards the things that I think
might get me praise. “Wow, Debbie, you
are a master at this. You rock. You are awesome.” Not that I ever actually
hear those words, but at least when I try easy things I don’t hear, “You suck
and should just quit.” Not that I ever
hear those words from anyone other than myself, although I fear them more than
I crave the good ones.
But
sometimes… sometimes, I force it. I
force myself to do hard things. It is
really forcing and I really am getting good at not excelling. And failing over and over again is, I’m sure,
going to pay off in the long run. I fail at relationships and it’s okay because
I’m learning to not settle for what's easy. I fail at Sudoku expert level and it’s okay
because it was just really hard and this is just practice. Like life.
I fail at work because oh my God seriously, Work?!? You set me up for this shit. And I fail at
being a mom, because isn’t that what Moms do?
Set such high expectations for ourselves that they are automatically
un-achievable (see: Pinterest).
Because
of my new-found success at failure, I decided a few years ago that I was going
to learn some sort of music, even though I have no musical abilities. I was told as a kid that I was a klutz and
ungraceful, so I never tried any dance or music or anything requiring any
elegance at all. Because I might suck.
But
now with my new-found quest for failure, what better thing to do than music
where I was sure to be a big fat crapola of shit. I tried guitar with Signa the first summer
she took lessons, but it wasn’t my thing.
I wasn’t bad enough to fail, but I was bored enough to just zone
out. I always thought piano would be my
thing, but it just wasn’t right, either—too soothing and too... something. Or maybe not enough something. Whatever. Just not for me.
The
only other thing I could think of was drums.
I saw my father-in-law playing his drums in his band a few times and he
looked like he was having so much fun.
So I googled for a teacher. There
were two that I thought may fit my needs.
One was in San Jose and the other right in my town. I bookmarked both a couple of years ago and
then… life.
Last
year I emailed the guy in my town and we decided after the first of this year
would be a good time to start lessons.
So earlier this year, I started my drum lessons with Joe Salles.
Now
this post’s title is FAILURE, but Joe is not one of those. He’s a great guy, a great drummer, and his
teaching is perfect for me. He has this
odd intuition to know when something is too hard, just hard enough, or too easy. He pauses, moves ahead, or switches it up
accordingly. This occurred to me a few
months ago when I was trying to get something, couldn’t, and he started telling
a story. It wasn’t our normal chat cycle
that we do in lessons; it was timed differently. Noticeably different. Then he stopped talking
a few minutes later and said, “Try again.”
I was able to do whatever it was just fine. I just needed a mental break and he knew it,
even though I didn’t have a clue other than, “I suck and should just quit.”
We
work on rudiments and syncopation and stick control and we both know I will
never be a rock star or in a band or a famous drummer. But you know what? I can’t remember ever having this much fun
learning to do something I’m not all that great at.