We all noodle around on the guitar. Some of us, admittedly, do it far too often.

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We all noodle around on the guitar.

We all noodle around on the guitar. Some of us, admittedly, do it far too often.

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We all noodle around on the guitar. Some of us, admittedly, do it far too often. The issue isn’t that we don’t want to practice, it’s that guitar players have a tendency to be easily distracted. The first step to healing yourself is admitting you have a problem, and I don’t know about you, but I DEFINITELY have a problem with wasting too much time wanking around on the guitar.

So, instead of trying to boil the ocean and completely avoid noodling, I decided I’d try to find value in the imminent deviation from legitimate guitar practice. The first course of action was being aware of when I would enter this state of wankery.

Now, sometimes we only have a little bit of time to kill where a productive practice session just isn’t in the cards. This was the case for me, so I already understood I wasn’t about to sit down for a hyper-productive John Petrucci-style routine.

Like most guitar players, I tend to go for the fun lead stuff when I’m just noodling. We all have our go-to licks, and I’m no different. This was the next piece I had to conquer. There’s minimal value in playing something you could play in your sleep, so I made a conscious effort to play something I wouldn’t normally play. I was still in noodling mode, mind you, but I was noodling in a way that was creative–not repetitive.

I chose to go against my natural tendencies of high-gain shred noodling, and instead opted for some crunchy, rhythmic chord strumming. I put the onus on myself to determine a progression and a feel without feeling any

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