ClaireCheers,- Hopefully, you can look forward the next gig and I wish you that it goes well and make you feel good.- Once you've done these last two, forgive yourself. You'll do better next time.- Ask for gentle, objective feedback or suggestions.- Identify a few things that could be done differently (just a few as you cannot fix everything at once).- It is not possible to learn anything without making mistakes. If you are not making any, you're not learning.Ah yes!Indeed it is a familiar feeling. So this pep talk is as much to myself as it is to you.- Live performance means that there will be mistakes.On Mon, Nov 6, 2017 at 10:10 AM, Maia McCormick via Callers <callers@lists.sharedweight.net > wrote:______________________________So after a gig, I find myself haunted by one or two missteps from an evening — the rolling start that was a little muddy, the thing I didn’t teach clearly enough so the dancers never quite got it — even though the dancers adjusted and all had a good time, and I still had the hall’s trust and goodwill at the end of the evening.Is this a familiar experience for anyone? Assuming you’ve already learned the lesson to be learned there, how do you move past it and stop self-flagellating?Would love to hear some people’s thoughts!Cheers,Maia_________________
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--Claire
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