What lessons did you learn from the geese?
What lessons did you learn from the geese?
Life lessons we can learn from geese
- Achieving together. Geese can get further together than apart.
- Collective responsibility. Geese understand that they all have a responsibility to take their turn to lead the formation.
- The power of positivity.
- Supporting every individual.
What can geese teach us about leadership?
It turns out, that the inherent nature of geese in flight has a lot to teach us about leadership, connection and teamwork. By flying together in one “V” formation, the whole flock adds 71% more momentum than if each bird flew alone. Lesson: There’s power in unity when a group of people is working toward a shared goal.
How do geese determine who leads?
Geese decide who leads their flying formation by taking turns sharing the responsibility. Geese typically take an equal share of leading their flying formation to split the load among multiple birds.
Does a flock of geese have a leader?
It boosts performance and keeps the team moving together. Ultimately, geese encourage us to think not about leaders, but about leadership. They dismantle hierarchies to make each goose – not just one – responsible for contributing to the big picture.
What is the moral of the geese?
Lesson: It pays to take turns doing the hard tasks and sharing leadership, as with geese, people are interdependent on each other’s skill, capabilities and unique arrangement of gifts, talents or resources. Fact 4: The gees flying in formation honk to encourage those up front to keep up their speed.
How do you practice phrasing?
The Art of Phrasing: Four Simple Ways to Make Your Leads Sing
- LISTEN BEFORE YOU PLAY: Sometimes I’ll start a profession and the student will just jump in and start playing licks.
- REST, SILENCE AND RHYTHM: Let the notes breathe a little bit.
- ACCENTUATE CERTAIN NOTES: Above, I referred to run-on sentences.
Does lead guitar play chords?
Lead guitar uses few or no chords, although sometimes it can be following a chord structure, while rhythm guitar uses the chords to drive the music. It is important to realize that lead guitar and rhythm guitar fit into two different parts of a band, but it just happens that they are played on the same instrument.
Is there a leader in a flock of geese?
What can we learn from geese teamwork?
Lessons We Learn from Geese Through teamwork. Fact: As each goose flaps its wings it creates “uplift” for the birds that follow. By flying in a “V” formation, the whole flock adds 71 percent greater flying range than if each bird flew alone.
Do geese sleep while flying?
The discovery that birds do in fact sleep on the wing, even if only in short, infrequent bursts, confirms a long-standing scientific theory about avian biology.
Who are some good examples of guitar phrasing?
Study the best guitar players and listen how they use phrasing all in their own unique way. As I mentioned earlier BB king, Albert King are great examples but also guitar players like David Gilmour (Pink Floyd), Robben Ford, Joe Satriani and tons of other great players can be a source of inspiration.
Do you need to improve your lead guitar phrasing?
If you answered anything less than ‘40-50’, then you still have a lot of work to do to improve your lead guitar phrasing. Until you learn to manipulate and maximize the expression of any guitar lick, your guitar playing will always sound ‘average’ at best, no matter how fast you can play or how many exotic scales you know.
What’s the goal of phrasing a guitar lick?
The result of this will be a ‘better’ sounding (more expressive) guitar lick. The goal isn’t to ‘remember’ all of the variations you create (that is neither useful nor practical), but simply to ‘go through the process’ of training your mind to not take notes for granted as you play them and get the most out of every note in your guitar licks.
What makes for a good lead guitar solo?
Their songs are loaded with dynamics that keep your ears glued to the song. Dynamics creates and enhances the excitement, tension, drama, rage, but also a feeling of warmth, sensitivity and emotion throughout the song. Inflections and articulation. Inflections are another way of spicing up your lead soloing.