Be humble! Stay humble!
There is always someone better than you are. Find that person and learn from them.
When an instructor shows you a new way to do something, that you can already do well, in the way you learned it... try the new way. Even if it means that you fail, and are not able to accomplish the technique. Learn to do the new way, the way the instructor is asking you to do. If you felt that the instructor was worth your time to get on the mat with, do yourself the favor of learning the new things from them. It will either add to your options, or develop better skill in a part of your technique. If you are going to go to the new instructor and just do it the way you always do.... there is no point in going to the new instructor.
When you are taught a new technique, use it in sparring. Even if that means the other guy can see it a mile away and counter it. This is part of the process of learning the technique.... You will fail, a lot, before you get good enough to apply it in a live situation. Don't avoid new techniques or techniques you are not good at when sparring.... be humble enough to try the things you need to work on, even if it means losing the sparring round to the newbie....
Doing something better, by definition means doing it differently than how you do it now. Be humble enough to keep changing how you do your techniques, because you need to change how you do them in order to improve them.
Be that guy, that the instructor corrects. Listen to what he tells you, and do it as best as you can. Instructors spend time helping people who want to be helped, who want to listen and want to change how they do things. It is not a bad thing when the instructor corrects you... it shows you that the instructor has decided to invest time into you. The more you accept, the more you will get.
There is always someone better than you are. Find that person and learn from them.
When an instructor shows you a new way to do something, that you can already do well, in the way you learned it... try the new way. Even if it means that you fail, and are not able to accomplish the technique. Learn to do the new way, the way the instructor is asking you to do. If you felt that the instructor was worth your time to get on the mat with, do yourself the favor of learning the new things from them. It will either add to your options, or develop better skill in a part of your technique. If you are going to go to the new instructor and just do it the way you always do.... there is no point in going to the new instructor.
When you are taught a new technique, use it in sparring. Even if that means the other guy can see it a mile away and counter it. This is part of the process of learning the technique.... You will fail, a lot, before you get good enough to apply it in a live situation. Don't avoid new techniques or techniques you are not good at when sparring.... be humble enough to try the things you need to work on, even if it means losing the sparring round to the newbie....
Doing something better, by definition means doing it differently than how you do it now. Be humble enough to keep changing how you do your techniques, because you need to change how you do them in order to improve them.
Be that guy, that the instructor corrects. Listen to what he tells you, and do it as best as you can. Instructors spend time helping people who want to be helped, who want to listen and want to change how they do things. It is not a bad thing when the instructor corrects you... it shows you that the instructor has decided to invest time into you. The more you accept, the more you will get.