Practicing but making no progress¶
Situation¶
- You have been practicing regularly for some time
- Effort and time invested feel substantial
- Improvement is minimal or inconsistent
- You are unsure whether to practice more or change approach
- Motivation is declining despite continued effort
This situation appears when repetition replaces effective learning.
Verdict¶
VERDICT: STOP
Continuing the same practice will not produce progress. More repetition will reinforce the current plateau.
Why this verdict¶
- Practice is not targeting a specific weakness
- Feedback is absent or too vague to guide adjustment
- Repetition is occurring without deliberate focus
Without change, effort accumulates but progress does not.
What happens if you continue¶
- You will invest more time with little measurable improvement
- Frustration will increase as effort feels wasted
- Confidence in your ability to improve will erode
Extended plateaus often lead to burnout rather than mastery.
A safer next step¶
Stop repeating the same practice routine.
Reset how you practice: - Identify one concrete skill gap - Practice only that gap deliberately - Introduce clear feedback before increasing volume
Focused adjustment is safer than more repetition.