I wasn't always so busy though. A few years ago after a breakup when I dramatically professed that I could never be happy again, and that I was destined to work at Coles forever and would die an old lonely cat lady... I decided in my wisdom, or my friends persistent advice, to do something to keep busy.
Until that point I had spent years at church just singing as I watched my talented friends sing and play guitar every week. I decided then that I wanted to learn to play guitar, so I did what every budding guitarist does and went to Aldi and bought myself an acoustic guitar complete with case and amp inputs.
A week later I got back together with the guy I had broken up with (not a smart move in retrospect) and my guitar sat in the corner of my room for another year until my brother decided he wanted to learn to play so I lent it to him. He actually got really good and after about another a year he bought his own and asked me if I wanted mine back. I left it with him for a bit longer so he could teach other young people guitar at the youth group, but when this creative challenge came up I decided it was time to pick the guitar up again, and my best friend/housemate was only too happy to be my teacher (after harassing me for the last few years to pick the guitar up and learn more than the 5 chords and 1 strumming pattern I knew back to front.)
So after my first cheer leading practice (see earlier blog) I was feeling less than adequate about my dancing abilities and needed a distraction. I took my guitar out and sat down for my first lesson with my best friend in the backyard. The conversation went as follows:
"I want to be able to play a whole song by the end of the next 10 weeks."
"Sure, we can do that, what song do you want to learn? Taylor Swift,? she's easy to play."
"No I want to learn Vienna by Billy Joel."
(We look up the chords on our phones)
"You'll have to learn to bar chords but otherwise it's not too terrible.""Too easy. Done.""It's not actually that easy... you realise it took me 6 months to learn one bar chord.""It's cool, I've got this, I'm hardcore."
"Mmmm oooo-kay..."
Ten minutes later after my friend who has been playing for years realised that even she didn't know some of the complex chords in the song we had switched back to Taylor Swift's Mean.
At first I was just playing single chords at their appropriate times, eventually working my way up to strumming and singing. By the end of the night I had forgotten how upset I had been about my lack of dancing ability and was reveling in the fact I'd played my first song on guitar. There was even one bar chord in the song that I had sounding semi decent by the time I went to bed that night. It was the perfect self esteem builder I needed that I was not in fact hopeless at everything I tried.
I was a little ambitious thinking I had time to become a master guitarist in the 10 weeks, or 10 months as it almost ended up being. Given the number of other commitments that had now filled my life it was probably another few months before I picked up the guitar again, learning the chords to Adele's Someone Like You.
I haven't yet been able to commit any songs to memory, but at this stage my chord knowledge has increased, and slowly but surely I am on the way to actually being able to say I can play guitar. In the meantime the guitar is sitting out of the case in easy reach and sight in my bedroom to remind me to actually pick it up and start playing.
Guitar School
4/10 for Commitment levels
8/10 for fun times