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Paolo said "X, Y, and Z had pretty much said everything I ever wanted to say on guitar so I stopped playing the guitar. I haven't played it seriously in almost a year now. I mostly played Chapman Stick. Most recently I bought a little drum made in Pakistan, a pair of drumsticks, and have begun practicing some of the 26 standard drum rudiments. At present, I feel like I am on an extended vacation from the guitar. Playing the Stick reminded me of my childhood piano playing experience" Ohhh, but it is your duty to find a way. This is a problem you'll meet again on the Stick, but just later. There a comfortable situation in learning. Since you LEARN things quite basic you don't master, you don't have to work too much on the voice. All the things to do come in a good part from "upstairs" and you don't have too much to invent it. It has been tested and done before, you what you are practicing when you start anew does not require to much mind work and involvement. I think. That's clear that finding this "voice" is as secure as walking a slippery wodd plank with sharks waiting for you under. It is also clear that most of us will never succeed. It is also clear that we will quite all try anyway, as long as possible. That is a kind of grail to me (with this human kwoledge I alked about a few post before). It may be a reason among others of course that make some of us pursue multi intrumentalism. It has also the ablity to distract you from what was before a main axe to "master". As far as psychology is concerned, I think the "beginner status" is more comfortable. You see and seek magic, and you figure, just learn it and work. The more I'll work, the more I'll know, and I'll be a magician myself. Then years later, it looks sometime like crookery. I worked, and again. Am I a magician? not yet. It's been years now, I'm not sure I will ever be. The skills were the easy part. But I'll never stop. Ever. Olivier malhomme