🎧 Learning an Instrument as an Adult, Taking the Leap iServalan | The Continuum Approach

🎧 Learning an Instrument as an Adult, Taking the Leap iServalan | The Continuum Approach

🎧 Learning an Instrument as an Adult, Taking the Leap iServalan | The Continuum Approach Learning an instrument as an adult is not the same act as for a child. It requires a different kind of commitment — not louder, not grander, but quieter and more deliberate.
It begins with a decision that some part of your life is allowed to belong to you, even when you are tired.
Even when nothing is left at the end of the day. For many adults, learning happens at night. After work.
After caring.
After thinking for other people. It happens when the body is already asking to be left alone — which is precisely why it matters how learning is approached. Because the leap is rarely about time. It is about safety. Safety to begin badly.
Safety to sound clumsy.
Safety to exist in a learning space that does not demand proof, speed, or visible progress. Most adults do not avoid instruments because they lack ability.
They avoid them because they have absorbed the idea that learning must look impressive to count. Online, this belief is reinforced constantly.
Fast results. Perfect tone. Before-and-after transformations that resemble athletic display rather than education. These are performances, not teaching. Deep musical learning has never been dramatic.
It is slow.
It is repetitive.
It happens in small, almost unnoticeable adjustments of the hands, the ear, the breath. Real commitment does not look heroic. It looks like returning. It looks like creating a space where there is no pressure to “achieve”, only permission to attend. When that permission exists, something important happens in the body. The instrument becomes a point of contact — something solid and responsive.
The hands have a task.
The breath finds rhythm.
Time regains shape. This is where music becomes therapeutic, though not in the sentimental sense. It is regulating.
It is containing.
It absorbs anxious energy without asking you to explain yourself.
It gives effort somewhere to go. You are not trying to express an identity.
You are allowing yourself to be occupied — safely, purposefully, and without judgment. Learning an instrument as an adult is not about talent, and it is not about catching up with an imagined past. It is about continuity. About offering yourself a practice that does not disappear when motivation falters.
A skill that grows through presence rather than pressure. The leap is smaller than it appears. It is not a leap into mastery.
It is a step into contact. And once that contact is made, learning has somewhere to settle.

iServalanℱ
Music, listening, and the Continuum Approach: Exploring sound across genres, eras, and performance cultures — from Baroque to punk, hip-hop to minimalism — without hierarchy or haste.

🎧 Podcast & essays: đŸŽ» Music School
https://iservalan.gumroad.com/l/concervatoire?
https://iservalan.gumroad.com📚 Books & long-form work by Sarnia de la MarĂ© FRSA:
https://www.amazon.co.uk/stores/author/B0CWGX2DJ6🎹 Professional profile:
https://www.a-n.co.uk/person/sarnia-de-la-mare-frsa-2/

#iServalan #ContinuumApproach #MusicPodcast #RadicalListening #MusicAcrossGenres
#PerformanceCulture #SarniaDeLaMaré

Avsnitt(252)

Music as Mental and Physical Occupation in Recovery | iServalan | Continuum Approach

Music as Mental and Physical Occupation in Recovery | iServalan | Continuum Approach

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What Would Chopin Have Done If Johnny Rotten Asked Him to Stand In One Night? | iServalan | Continuum

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What Would Mozart Have Done If He’d Been Dropped Into a Grime Night? | iServalan | Continuum Approach

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What Would Mozart Have Done If He’d Been Dropped Into a Grime Night? People underestimate Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart because they confuse charm with lightness. Mozart is funny, yes.He’s elegant, yes. A f...

22 Dec 20253min

Beethoven by Robert S. Carr Live Public Domain Reading | iServalan | Continuum Approach

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Robert S. Carr wrote a poem titled "Beethoven," published in Weird Tales magazine in August 1927, and it's available as an audio recording on LibriVox as part of a poetry collection, showcasing the Am...

22 Dec 20251min

Who Would Win X Factor: Bach, Mozart, Chopin, Liszt or Rachmaninov? | iServalan | Continuum Approach

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The Shepherd William Blake Public Domain Live Recording | iServalan | Continuum Approach

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Beutiful #spokenwordiServalanℱMusic, listening, and the Continuum Approach: Exploring sound across genres, eras, and performance cultures — from Baroque to punk, hip-hop to minimalism — without hierar...

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Using the Body in Music | iServalan | Continuum Approach

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21 Dec 20255min

Teaching Tempo as Sensation, Not BPM | iServalan | Continuum Method

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Teaching Tempo as Sensation, Not BPM(Why time must be felt before it can be counted)Tempo is usually introduced as a number.60 BPM.80 BPM.120 BPM.Neat. Measurable. Reassuring.And completely insufficie...

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