Paying attention involves both deciding what to focus on, and the actual set of skills used in focusing.
Before I can focus my eyes or my mind on anything, I must pick that which I will attend to. It is only after this happens that actual focusing, or selection, may take place.
For example, my general take on teaching has been to be task oriented.
With this starting point I might think of the (or a) best way to learn T’ai Chi.
I have tended to teach the way my teachers, the Chows, taught me. This was perhaps an excellent way, for them in their time and place, and in their culture, assuming a mature population in which the student takes responsibility for their own commitment, they focused on the form.
In a large population, this was sufficient to keep motivated students. However many students today in our culture may benefit from something more.
As Mary Poppins would say, “A little bit of sugar helps the medicine go down.”
Many successful teachers know this and take this into account.
This entails focusing on the big picture, not just the teaching task but also the teaching situation.
I had excellent teachers, but perhaps I didn’t acquire some of their more subtle techniques that aided their students through the more tedious parts of the learning process.
For me, this might just be some of the wisdom that accrues through age.
For others, this entails looking at what might engage the student, and other such details that might fall under the category of being not only an instructor but also serving as an entertainer, or roll modeling healthy interactions.
After these concerns are attended to and the student is helped through any pitfalls encountered, then the focusing or selection process may be applied more appropriately to the T’ai Chi content.
As I begin Teaching T’ai Chi again perhaps I might improve my teaching skills by paying more attention to the student’s needs as a student, and include this in the curriculum design.
“A successful musician is not only a musician, but also an entertainer.”
- Marshall Tucker
Best Wishes to All,
Daniel