Answering my own question. 😊

Unfortunately, I find that I fall back into old practice habits, and practise mistakes...
I am working on one of my pieces and I felt I was making so little progress, and of course, I started to push. I could barely play the piece at mm 36 so I thought I would play the whole piece at 40. Guess how that worked out?

But yesterday I realised I was on a road to nowhere. So I restarted, chose random passages of four measures that I could play however slowly as I needed, as long as I played them correctly. In case I made a mistake anyway, I practised the correct note five times.

This was such a relief! Gradually, I increased to passages of five and then six measures, I took my metronome again and played the passage at 30, then 35, then 40, and then once again at 30, then 35, then 40 again. Today, I felt I could even add mm 45 to that sequence. Tomorrow I'll continue working with the random passages, and the day after tomorrow, I'll take a day off.

However, another piece I am learning is not suitable for Molly's schedule, at least not now. The first long phrase of the piece shows the main theme of the piece, without any embellishments, and I need to learn how to play that phrase before I can start learning the other phrases.

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... feeling like the pianist on the Titanic ...

Pallas I start each piece with great organization. But as the issues become more subtle, and mistakes get baked-in from non-optimal rushing of playing through, I just have a hard time backing up, slowing down, isolating issues, making a checklist, and approaching the piece on the rotating schedule again. For me, this is the actual hardest part of the practice: doing the work to identify what to repeat and how, staying organized, prioritized, and focused!

I don't think there is a one-size-fits-all formula to help you stay disciplined. Like I mentioned, I think you need to regularly reflect back and find improvements and tricks that work for you.

Pallas The main reason I stopped diligently Mollying is because I haven't figured out how to manage my workload that way and still meet my teacher's expectations that I work on every piece every day.

This is pretty much how it's worked out for me. Over the summer, when I didn't have lessons, I could (in a very non-rigid manner) follow the MG schedule. But once lessons started up again, the schedule went out the window. Though my teacher has not explicitly stated the expectation that I work on each piece every day, there would be the expectation that they had received some practice time during the week.

In effect, what I was doing before the MG videos is what I do now: a chunk of a brand new piece gets worked on every day for at least the first three or four days; after that I can let it rest for a day or so while I work on other things. In my reading, that's the essence of the MG schedule. What MG has given me is permission to not work on everything every day. Before I felt guilty, but now I feel justified! πŸ˜‡

    Pallas The main reason I stopped diligently Mollying is because I haven't figured out how to manage my workload that way and still meet my teacher's expectations that I work on every piece every day.

    I understand, because this is not possible. Proper Mollying means taking breaks!

    I keep on writing to you and deleting, because unwarranted advice is not very nice, but I also worry that the piano starts to become a source of stress for you. It is perfectly fine for an adult student to say, - I felt overwhelmed by the work load of three new pieces, or, - I have practised but the results are not very good, because I need more time.

    As I understand, it is not unusual at all for piano teachers to hear that the student did not practise, sometimes for valid reasons, sometimes for less valid reasons. So a student who does practise but who needs more time to learn a piece than the teacher had expected is something they just need to accept.

    Good Mollying is also taking care of yourself. Wasn't that the first of her September challenges?
    (I just checked. It was.)

    *
    ... feeling like the pianist on the Titanic ...

    Stub What MG has given me is permission to not work on everything every day. Before I felt guilty, but now I feel justified! πŸ˜‡

    Me too. πŸ™‚ I still get a bad case of the "shoulds" sometimes but then I talk myself out of it because I know there can be benefits to letting something marinate in the background if I get excited about working on a new shiny piece (a near weekly occurrence...).

    Pallas So what, sometimes I just want to play through and enjoy my pieces. It's not a crime!

    Indeed...this may be the only piece of advice she offered that I have flat-out rejected. I am totally on board with focusing on trouble spots, and I've had good results recently with zeroing in on those exclusively for the first several weeks before I spend much time on the rest of the piece. But I'm not going to avoid playing through if I feel like it. I enjoy it too much, and my teacher expects it at every lesson anyway. I'm not walking into that unprepared.

    I'm very bad at taking breaks during practice as I've always been, but am good about spaced practice (because it happens mutually in my life when I get busy) and sometimes there are many breaks of days when I don't practice at all. I try to keep it in my head to loosely follow her optimized schedule.

    Generally I'm not randomizing my practice although I have my "trouble pages" (there are a lot of them, feels like every page is bookmarked!) flagged in forScore and sometimes I am doing random practice by jumping to those pages. I am also not doing repetitions the way she advises.

    Old habits die hard 😭

    Can someone remind me of how long a chunk of practice she recommends before taking a micro break (and how long that is, too?). Maybe I should start relying on timers.

    Edit: just found this article. She does 3 clean repetitions followed by a 10 second break. Tries to do 9 clean repetitions total. @Animisha thanks for reminding me about all the things I should be doing to make my practice much more efficient!

    https://www.violinist.com/blog/violabrain/20228/29335/

    Pallas I don't like how it feels not to practice the way she's expecting.

    This makes a lot of sense to me. As long one is paying a teacher, they ought to be largely following or aligning with their teacher. That doesn't mean not incorporating other teaching techniques, but I would want to prioritize the teacher's approach over other's.

    Pallas Where I get really lost is when the notes are pretty solid across the piece and I start incorporating increasingly complex lesson notes (e.g., play through while vocally singing the treble line), but then mistakes pop up all over the place.

    Yep, some how this is where I think Dr. G's approach falls short...

    Pallas once you've learned the notes and the rhythm, the "real" work starts.

    Exactly. I feel like her approach is really geared toward learning the notes and the rhythm, but I haven't figured out what her approach is for the next steps, for example when you're working on the whole piece.

    Having said that, I haven't finished her whole book yet.

    I do incorporate some of her practice techniques, and some are things I used to do and had gotten away from.

    But I also want to re-read the Inner Game of Music, which I read so long ago that my memory is faint, but I'm wondering if that will round out the parts I feel are missing from Dr. G....

    We'll see, I still need to finish Dr. G's book! πŸ˜…

    Pallas The main reason I stopped diligently Mollying is because I haven't figured out how to manage my workload that way and still meet my teacher's expectations that I work on every piece every day. I don't like how it feels not to practice the way she's expecting.

    Unless your teacher wants you to practice the whole piece everyday, the Molly method means you can work on just a section of a piece. On rest days for that section, you can work on another section of the same piece, satisfying the expectation to work on that piece every day. If your piece is close to performance ready Molly even has the concept of interleaved performance practice.

    As far as my own experience, even though I've been pleasantly surprised at how well I remember a recently learned section of a piece after her one or even two week rest period, for pieces at my lower intermediate level, a 2 week break just means it will take me that much longer to play the piece at an acceptable standard. I'm experimenting with 2-4 days in a row for a new section and combining it with the older section every other day.

    I was most excited about using the method as a means of maintaining a repertoire of my favorite non-classical pieces. I'm happy to report that her schedule of 2-week rests followed by 3 days in a row of practice has worked really well for that. I still have a lot of my old repertoire to relearn, but for maintenance, the rest period employs the power of active recall and the 3-days of practice are good for fixing fractures.

      I generally do this kind of reading at night, after piano practice, when my spouse and I are lounging are the living room. As you might imagine, I often find myself nodding off, so progress is slow πŸ˜…

      But anyway, I have both the Inner Game book and Gebrian’s book m, so I’ll get through them eventually. 😊

      @Pallas if you start reading the Inner Game of Music, be sure to share your thoughts!

      I vaguely recall that I read The Inner Game of Music after the Inner Game of Tennis and I might have been vaguely disappointed with the music book. I think The Inner Game of Tennis is excellent, and pertinent...I try to re-read it once a year or so. It's basically right brain vs. left brain stuff, although I don't recall if that is explicitly stated. I am SO interested in that topic. I just waded through a monster book called The Master and His Emissary...there was so much info that I felt a little overwhelmed and I know a lot of it didn't stick, but I had to plow through on a schedule because of the library due date!

      Pallas My inner game wants improving!

      This is my biggest issue and I'm always reading or watching videos about the psychology aspect. Lots of work to do there...

        JB_PT I vaguely recall that I read The Inner Game of Music after the Inner Game of Tennis and I might have been vaguely disappointed with the music book.

        I never read the Inner Game of Tennis, but that was the original one and the Inner Game of Music was based on that, right??

        Anyway, I read the Inner Game of Music years ago... probably around 2005 -- I only know that because I organized and performed a concert in 2006 where I played maybe 30 minutes of music, and I remember that I based my performance prep around the ideas in the Inner Game and the book A Soprano On Her Head. At the time, I remember thinking that the ideas in those two books completely changed my approach to practicing and performing.

        But at this point, I can't really remember details πŸ˜… so I thought it was a good idea to return to them....

        Anyway, once I get more into my re-read of the Inner Game, and @Pallas starts reading it, we'll have to compare notes.

          ShiroKuro I never read the Inner Game of Tennis, but that was the original one and the Inner Game of Music was based on that, right??

          I believe this is correct. The Tennis book was first and it may have spawned several others...

          I also loved A Soprano on Her Head. Another one I need to re-read periodically and I'm overdue!

          Pallas But it's been a while since I read the book, so if I've remembered wrong, please point out where I missed something.

          Of course you can customize however you like! But if you are asking for what her recommendations are specifically, ermmmm.....it does seem like some of this is mixed up. I can't review my book for a couple days or I would help. I know she has a 3 videos specifically on blocked/random/serial practice too if that's easier.

          lilypad Unless your teacher wants you to practice the whole piece everyday, the Molly method means you can work on just a section of a piece. On rest days for that section, you can work on another section of the same piece, satisfying the expectation to work on that piece every day.

          I interpret her approach to be that the idea is that one works on one section of the piece at a time, but it would certainly be fine to work on more of the piece. Just not together. So maybe you're working on four measures from the A theme. So that's one part of your practice focus. Then you might switch to 6 measures from the B theme. I think that would be fine, but the point is to avoid mindless "playing through," and avoid playing the whole piece before ready.

          At least that's my understanding... As I said somewhere (I think I said...) I'm about halfway through the book, but I also started reading the Inner Game again. Maybe I'm mixing things up...

          Pallas starting with the most difficult, and staying with the same piece for larger blocks of time.

          I used to always start with the hardest parts first. And certainly, it is ideal to spend more time overall on the harder parts.

          But I don't know if it's because my pieces got harder, or for some other reason, but sometimes I find that I have more success if I start with an easier section of the piece. That works esp well when the hard parts seem just too hard. By working on the music in the context of easier passages, then, when I move on to the harder section, it often goes better.

          Don't let this disrupt your planning though, @Pallas . I mainly mention it in case you sometimes feel it's easier to get into a piece through some other section. The trick is, as you say, to make sure that, over the course of multiple practice sessions, you're not spending more time on parts you can already play....

            ShiroKuro I used to always start with the hardest parts first. And certainly, it is ideal to spend more time overall on the harder parts.

            This reminds me of a video by Dr. Shijun Wang on how to learn new pieces. He suggests one way to help relieve performance anxiety is to learn the end of a piece of music first, then work backwards. This way, the latter part of the pieces gets more practice. Then during a performance, you become more and more comfortable as the playing progresses.

              iternabe This reminds me of a video by Dr. Shijun Wang on how to learn new pieces. He suggests one way to help relieve performance anxiety is to learn the end of a piece of music first, then work backwards. This way, the latter part of the pieces gets more practice. Then during a performance, you become more and more comfortable as the playing progresses.

              Yes! I first learned this idea from posts on PW (and I'm pretty sure people there were bringing in these ideas from Piano Street).

              The idea is that as you move through the piece, you getting to sections that you've played more, rather than getting to sections that you've played less. And in a performance situation, that helps a lot!

              I have gotten away from this style as well, but I should probably get back to it, or at least incorporate it partially... Esp with one piece I'm working on right now, where the whole piece is almost the same level of difficulty except for the very last part (the second and third to last measures)...

              Somehow it takes a lot of discipline to practice this way... it's the same with truly incorporating Gebrian's ideas. It's just easier to start at the beginning and play through.. πŸ˜