As you get older and gain more experience, you're able to do multiple things. You don't necessarily have to focus so hard on your performance in order to have a good one.
Sentiment: POSITIVE
Every performance is an opportunity to have something new or to learn something new.
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.
I'm interested in all forms of performance, yet I think it's difficult to be as equally talented in all of them as they call for such different skills. At the moment, I still feel I'm learning and want as much experience and variety as possible.
Experience has taught me that you have to improve all the time-little bit by little bit-and not keeping starting everything from new.
The more you do stuff, the better you get at dealing with how you still fail at it a lot of the time.
You just try and do as much variation and as much difference and as much as possible, so you put yourself out there to try anything, really. As long as you feel you're going to get something out of the experience, it's all worth it.
If you want to be good at something, you really have to work at it every single day. You have to work hard at the things that are hard. Otherwise you are just treading water.
Practice quality, and you get better at quality. But quality takes time, so by working solely on quality, you end up losing something else that's important - speed.
I don't know how anybody gets better at anything aside from doing it.
You have to perform at a consistently higher level than others. That's the mark of a true professional.