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Funny how much sheer pleasurability and inspiration matter for habits. Ever since I got a new piano, my old practice time goals (which I often struggled to meet) feel comically low. Now somewhat effortlessly 3 months ahead of target… gotta ratchet up the goal!
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Making the habit more pleasurable is an oft-suggested strategy. I think it'd be pretty enabling to assemble a wiki-style database of per-habit pleasure/inspiration-increasing strategies!
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Something about this feels wrong. Like: why should I come up with ways to make myself to want to play the piano more? Shouldn't I just naturally want it? Yet: deliberate practice is unpleasurable! (Ericsson et al '93) *Playing* is, but need much of the former to get the latter.
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More time just means raw minutes on bench, nothing specific. I experience a lot of feedback loops while playing: if practice is inconsistent, my skills atrophy, and I get less enjoyment from playing, which makes me practice less. Same (though less) in the positive direction.
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makes sense. i understand raw minutes but was asking what does it 'mean/signify'. it sounds like you said the issues come from inconsistency? so why not continuity or 'more often' versus 'more minutes'?
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The Beeminder threshold line approximates "consistency" as a goal pretty effectively, actually. Except when I get quite far from the line as I just was; then you can "retroratchet" to bring the "road" up to meet you, as I've done here:
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