Showing posts with label expert. Show all posts
Showing posts with label expert. Show all posts

Saturday, March 3, 2012

Starting again!

Ever heard of the 10,000 hour rule? The theory is that the thing that sets an expert apart from a novice is not necessarily innate talent, but rather 10,000 hours of practice. That’s quite a long time. If you work 8 hours a day, five days a week for a year (no vacation or public holidays), you accrue just over 2000 hours a year. 

In an earlier post titled "Habit forming" I discussed the process of habit forming. In this post I described a study that shows a new habit can take over 250 days to become cemented as a habit. I suppose a habit practiced for for over 10,000 hours would then be considered an expert skill?!

I used to take photos every day of my life. I usually tried to spend at least an hour a day with my eye glued to the view finder, or more often studying the screen on the back of my trusty Canon 50D. If you’d like to see what I was photographing take a look at my flickr photostream. There are recurring themes - flowers, spiders and birds feature a lot, interspersed with wildlife and an occasional landscape. 

By a rough calculation, I think I’m between two-thirds and three-quarters of the way to becoming a photography expert. I think some of my work is good. I have entered and won a few local photography competitions and some of my photos are used by a commercial postcard company (spressit.com).

When I left Kenya, my daily photography stopped. I guess it was a combination of factors - change in environment, having the photographic gear scattered between boxes, a different rhythm and pace to my life back in South Africa. Mostly I think it was a lack of motivation and inspiration. In Kenya I was surrounded by wild Africa -  birds, insects, spiders, cool trees and landscapes. In Johannesburg I was confronted by a different kind of jungle - a concrete one!

Today I am starting again, on the photography that is! The picture below was the result of a 15 min kick-start ad hoc photography session. Just before I left Kenya I upgraded to a Canon 7D. I used this camera with my Lensbaby Composer and shot a total of 24 shots. I have called the abstract image “Tools, Tones and Textures”.


I realize that while Johannesburg is not exactly wild, there are still loads of places and spaces to photograph. I have resolved to start taking more photos again (I’m so close to being an expert after all ;-). I have also resolved, bearing in mind the 10,000 hour rule, not to be so hard on myself in my new job where certain functions and processes seem so hard - I am after all only a novice where these are concerned, and like anything in life - practice WILL make perfect!