The continuous practice of any skill or technique leads to a better mind-body connection to it. It is a new stimulus for the body. this new stimulus is firstmost, stranger to the body and mind and thus feels difficult, jarring, boring, or simply unlikeable at first.
This does not remain the case once one continues the practice, whether it be physical or intellectual, likable to do, or required by circumstance. Any activity, including the likes of jumping, reading, speaking, cleaning, drawing, listening with care, and mindfulness for any skill, activity, or technique. A person may not like the workings of a 9-5 job but many will learn how to be better at it because they have to. a seller’s child may learn how to be better at convincing the customer that his goods are better than his competitor’s.
A writer may write with utmost tenacity once, and not anymore, then he will not get used to the tenacious style that he wishes to initiate or establish in the first -place. The individual will do it and keep doing it, and he will adapt to the stimulus and produce results and outcomes that were expected out of repetitive practice.
But he must keep going if he wishes to be even better.