The Musings Of An Opinionated Sod [Help Me Grow!]


Pressure May Create Diamonds, But Only After You’ve Crapped Your Pants …

We’ve all been there.

At school, work or home … where you realise what you have done is not what you thought you had been asked to do.

And when that happens, your mind switches off from everything around you to intensely focus on all the possible scenarios of what is going to happen next.

The shouting.
The insulting.
The feelings of stupidity.
The need to find time to fix something you haven’t allocated any additional time to fix.

Basically, it becomes a catastrophization-fest.

Now of course, more often than not, the disaster you imagine doesn’t eventuate.

That might be because you’re able to make your case for the work you did … or you’re able to adapt your work on the fly, to meet the expectations of the meeting you’re in or you just come clean and discover that – in most cases – people are reasonable and just ask you to sort it out as soon as you can.

But even though most of us will have gone through this situation countless times, the feeling of trepidation when you sense you may have messed up, never goes away.

I say this because I recently saw a video that captures this experience at a magnitude that – fortunately – few, if any, of us, will ever experience.

Pianist Maria João Pires stepped in as a last-minute substitute for the conductor, Stephen Hough.

Because of the timing of the concert, there was no rehearsal time, but having talked to the conductor over the phone, she felt confident as the piece – Mozart’s Concerto in A major [K.488] was something she had performed at a concert previously.

Except she hadn’t.

Because as the orchestra struck up the introduction to the piece – in front of a paying audience at a full concert hall – Maria discovered the piece she was expected to play was in D minor [K.466] … not only a fundamental difference to what she knew but also how to play.

The video just shows the utter panic she experiences, amplified by the fact there was a room full of people all staring at her, waiting for the moment where she begins.

And you know what, she pulls it off.

Because after the feelings of trauma, drama and death that no doubt went through her entire being, she realized she had nothing she could do except trust her talent.

Which she did.

Flawlessly.

Even though the appreciative audience will never realise just what she did for them.

Which is my way of saying as bad as things can sometimes feel – as long as you’re not in your situation because of laziness – there’s 4 things to remember:

1. Believe in your talent.
2. Remember you’re not in as bad a situation as Maria.
3. Whatever situation you’re in, it’s not the end of the World … it just temporarily feels that way.
4. The most powerful moments of creativity are often born out of adversity.

Check it out below …


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