October 4, 2012

Dear Woodshedders,

Woodsheddin’ is a term musicians use to describe the type of dedicated, independent, and intense practice that being great at a musical instrument requires. I know I’ve spent many hours woodsheddin’ on my guitar. In those hours of practice, my fingers grew stronger, my mind saw patterns on the fretboard, and my ears heard new sounds that I didn’t previously think possible.

To be great at anything requires intense practice. Yesterday, we practiced our multiplication algorithm. We’ll continue that today. To become proficient at these algorithms, you have to spend lots of time doing problems over and over. I can show you the process. I can coach you through the process. I can even show you cool new processes that might better fit your mind (we’ll learn the Egyptian method today). But I can’t do the practice for you. You have to put in the work. And if you do, you will get the rewards.

Sincerely,

Mr. Heimbuck


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