For a long time now, I've been trying to overcome perfectionism. In the perfectionistic world view, a person is either good at something or bad at it. Success is something you are, not something you do. If you do well at something, it is because you were simply good at it to begin with. Pride in any accomplishment is therefore hubris, since your
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Actually I think I do have a bias against left brain/right brain, because I think oversimplification of what it means lead into the "good at/bad at" fallacy, as well as some other badness. (For example, I was good at math as a kid, so expected to be bad at art; people think that science isn't a creative endeavor, etc.)
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Brain surgeon, author, and popular Conference on World Affairs participant Leonard Shlain gets really into metaphorical left brain/right brain thinking, particularly in The Alphabet vs. The Goddess: The Conflict Between Word and Image ( my review). He gives a lot of fun stuff to think about, but it's important to keep the left/right metaphorical status in mind.
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The way it's described in the drawing book is that the left brain sees the thing-as-symbol, while the right sees the thing-as-is. So the left is the fast one- for instance in reading, you can process a whole bunch of letters quickly because each "a" is symbolic, but something novel, like a different typographic system, requires the creativity of the right brain. (The application to drawing being to convince your right brain to draw things as they are, instead of the symbols for things.)
Really I should probably just think about "novice/slow/seeing brain" and "expert/fast/categorizing brain," since too much other stuff is wrapped up in right/left, including, well, actual neurobiology that may or may not go along with the categories I'm trying to impose on it.
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the best talk i saw at nist was about music and the brain, but, an interesting factoid he gave in that talk is that it takes 10,000 hours of practice to become a master of anything. So, like, 20 hours a week for 10 years. just was interesting to know. So, if you want to become a master of art and you don't start out awesome, just dedicate that time and commit yourself and you will become a master eventually.
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Sure, 20 hours a week for 10 years... or 60 hours a week for 3! Sounds like a post-doc!
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