Tuesday, November 22, 2011

...it takes a little practice.

Repetition...repetition...repetition.  At the root of learning and retaining new information, as well as creation of fascinating sights, is repetition.  When this occurrence is man-made it can be important and noteworthy, but not as amazing as when it is natural.  I was at a shoot recently when this wall of slate caught my attention.  Each layer rested atop another, building a solid "wall" around 10  - 15 feet tall of pure slate.  This stone barrier was originally a sharp decline near a construction site, but had to be excavated to allow for vehicles and a new building.  What remains is a true work of nature.

How old do think these stones are?

How did the "ingredients" for each layer wind up in that location...and what are they?

What gives it the variety in color and textures...some bright, some muted, some hard and some soft?

Am I the only one amazed by how after thousands of years, this hill (technically, I was standing on the side of a hill that has over many years been carved out for different buildings) could form in such a colorful, symmetrical way?

With each layer of slate that piled on, the hill reached higher and higher above the adjacent valley, and built an even more amazing piece of artwork.

There is a lesson here that I have to keep in mind myself.  Often, when I am trying to learn a new skill or technique, I expect to have it mastered in a matter of minutes.  I forget that it takes practice and repetition. When I was first learning to shoot and edit over a decade ago, I did not walk out of the room an expert.  After years of practice I reached the skill level at which I work today.  Sometimes we are all hard on ourselves, with crazy notions of becoming proficient at a job after one day...give yourself time.  Study, practice and after a week or so you will start notice improvement...after a couple of months even more...and then a year later you will be completely confident, reminiscing of the days when you used struggle over focusing a camera on the fly - or maybe that was just me!

If you ever start to get discouraged, think about how long it took to build this wall - you'll feel better in no time!

That's the Golden Perspective...what's yours?

Friday, November 4, 2011

Are Really You Effective At Multi-tasking?

I think this is probably the ultimate in multi-tasking.  What do you do when snow and leaves cover the ground at the same time?  Which job do you try to tackle first: raking the leaves or shoveling the snow?  Maybe you do both simultaneously? Is it possible to clear the snow off and then pile up the remaining leaves?

It is probably easy to look back now and say, "Wow that was kind of crazy.  I've never had to deal with so many leaves and nearly a foot of snow at the same time!"  During the storm, however, I'm sure you did not think the situation was so amusing.  You were probably not thinking about the irony, but rather, removing the mess that seemed to overtake your yard; or how you desperately wanted electricity back to warm your house and prevent the food from spoiling in your fridge.  A few days removed, I am able to look at things in a different way...how effective can you really be when multi-tasking?

There are usually two clear sides to this argument: those that feel multi-tasking is not only possible, but something at which they excel; and those that feel it is useless.  Women swear they were born multi-taskers, while men can't even consider working on two things at once.  I have to admit, I'm not the best at doing two things at once.  My most successful attempt is reading e-mails while I eat breakfast, but that's pretty much it.  Even though I may have several programs/projects open on my computer during the day, I'm not effectively working on each of them simultaneously.  I usually have to complete one, clear my head, then move on to the next.

Honestly, how much focus can you give to one project/task if you are thinking about another one at the same time?

Isn't it difficult to concentrate on writing a report (or in my case editing) if you constantly check your e-mails to see if anything new arrived?

Won't you eventually get things confused, and put the wrong name or price on a document?

While snow piled on top of leaves is not as serious as work issues, you have to admit, a snowstorm in the middle of Fall does give new meaning to the term "multi-tasking"!

That's the Golden Perspective...what's yours?