I think it's a fallacy that the harder you practice the better you get.
Sentiment: NEGATIVE
When you are not practicing, someone else is getting better.
It's not necessarily the amount of time you spend at practice that counts; it's what you put into the practice.
People believe practice makes perfect, but it doesn't. If you're making a tremendous amount of mistakes, all you're doing is deeply ingraining the same mistakes.
If I don't practice the way I should, then I won't play the way that I know I can.
The more I practice the luckier I get.
To me, the object of practicing is to allow you to play what you hear. But you're always hearing new things, so you never get to the end of it.
I'm a person who gets better with practice. Getting older is awesome - because you get more practice.
Here's a very simple, common sense idea - if you practice something more, you get better at it; if you can't complete everything you need to do, take more time.
Practice is everything. This is often misquoted as Practice makes perfect.
The more I practice, the luckier I get.