- Edited
A couple of thoughts:
On perseverance, I find what works for me so far is just to make sure I get my fingers on the keys every day. It does not matter how long or what I intend to play. The biggest hurdle seems to be just to get over to the piano and sit down. On days when I am not as motivated, I find once I sit down, start with some scales, often end up practicing as long or even longer than my more motivated days. The act of playing focuses my mind and piques my interest more than anything else.
On dream pieces, I don't have any. I just wait for what comes in my level. However, during my level one study, there is one piece that does feel a little more special to me. I also ended up spending disproportionally more time on that piece than all of the other ones. Looking back, that time spent feel quite inefficient. The reason is the left hand pattern involved is not something I was ready for. But for the love of the piece, I am driven to "master" the left hand - in retrospect, the approach did not work well, I could not "master" the technique just by repetition. The technique is more likely a number of small, discrete abilities that's better developed individually and then put together. This, to me, is the potential trap of trying pieces too far beyond my ability. I do have many pieces that I love to listen. At the same time, I am accepting that my knowledge is still so limited that I have no idea what's involved to make those piece sound as good as they should.