If you stop doing a skill you've done for years for any period of time, there's an adjustment period to get it back. In anything you do. Motor skills won't work as fast, because repetition is everything.
Sentiment: NEGATIVE
Some of the routines come back very easily. We do it off the top of our heads.
You might think that after 40 years of practice you wouldn't need to practice anymore, but sadly it doesn't work that way. You still have to keep chugging away and perfecting.
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.
Athletic skills are acquired over a long period of time and after countless hours of practice.
I'm no good at really anything that involves motor skills.
The thing about motor neuron disease, once a muscle stops working, it doesn't start again.
If you improve or tinker with something long enough, eventually it will break or malfunction.
You can work hard to sharpen your talent, to get better at whatever it is that you do, and I think that's what it comes back to.
How long you can continue to be good at something is how much you believe in yourself and how much hard work you do with the training.
I always had to keep improving my skills in order to remain competitive and keep winning.
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