Chapter 4 of Pinker's book is the bit that isn't fun. Grammar. Learning the rules is important since, as an example, it arms you 'when an editor or grammatical stickler claims to find an error in a sentence you wrote, but you don't see anything wrong with it, you can at least understand the rule in question well enough to decide for yourself whether to follow it'. Beyond just feeding your ability to defend yourself, having a solid foundation does allow you to have more fun later.
Source: www.harrybliss.com
Drills. Fitness. Theory. Discomfort.
Part of gaining an ability to be able to pick up new skills is figuring out how to enjoy the 'horrible bits'. Like learning to enjoy washing the dishes by doing it with a glass of wine and some music playing. There are those who love ironing because they set it up in space of the house they love, create an atmosphere they enjoy and it becomes meditative. For those tasks though, you don't have to be mentally present for the task. For things where you have to be present, there must also be tricks.
I think that is the main role of mentors, coaches, teachers, study-buddies, being part of a team, or even just wanting to be able to use the new ability to engage with people at a later stage - to get a spark going, or keep a flame burning to make the tough stuff worth while.
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