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44 contributions to Mat Creedon School of Music
🎵 Daily Reflection 013 – Does Music Need a Purpose?
Today's reflection might feel a little uncomfortable... but sometimes those are the ones that change us the most. Take a moment to ask yourself: Why did you start learning music? For me, the answer was pretty simple. When I was a kid, I thought girls liked guitar players! There was no great mystery to it. I wanted music to give me something. Love. Attention. Approval. A sense of identity. As I grew older, I realised I wasn't alone. Many of us begin learning music because we hope it will make us somebody. We imagine becoming the hero who finally masters that difficult piece, impresses an audience or proves something to ourselves. But here's a question that completely changes the conversation... What if music didn't need a purpose? What if it didn't need to make you successful? What if it didn't need to make you important? What if music was simply... music? At first, that idea can feel unsettling. If music doesn't complete our identity, then what are we striving for? The mind doesn't like that question. It quickly fills the space with stories. "I'm not talented enough." "This piece is too difficult." "I'll never be able to play like that." Notice something. Those thoughts aren't coming from the music. They're coming from your interpretation of the music. Fear isn't a feature of the notes. It's a thought. And I'd even go as far as saying it's one of the poorest guesses the mind can make. It imagines danger before it understands what's actually happening. If you're going to use something to guide your musical journey, I wouldn't recommend fear. I'd recommend curiosity. I'd recommend common sense. I'd recommend experience. 🎵 Today's Practice Choose a piece of music. Before you play a single note, spend one minute simply looking at it. Notice every story your mind creates. Don't fight the thoughts. Don't judge them. Just notice them. Then quietly remind yourself: These thoughts are not the music. The notes haven't changed. Only the story has. I'd love to hear your thoughts on today's reflection.
1 like • 16h
@Linda Cameron That's beautiful, Linda. 🌿 I love the way you expressed that—"I wanted the music to come from my fingers, not just into my ears." There's something so deeply human about that. It's the desire to participate in the music rather than simply observe it. I wonder if that's what draws so many of us to an instrument. We don't just want to hear beauty—we want to become part of its expression. Thank you for sharing that. It really touched me. 🎵
1 like • 16h
@Veerle Mertens I absolutely love this, Veerle. 🌿 It sounds as though music found you before you ever consciously chose it. That's a beautiful gift. I also smiled when you mentioned dancing—I think music and movement are really two expressions of the same language. Perhaps that's why it has always felt so natural to you. It wasn't something you had to become... it was simply something you already were. Thank you for sharing such a lovely memory with us. 😊🎶
🎵 Daily Reflection 012 – What Story Are You Adding to the Music?
Today, I'd like you to try a simple experiment. Before you play a single note, place a piece of music in front of you and simply notice what your mind says. Does it tell you it's too difficult? Does it tell you it's boring? Does it tell you that you're not good enough? Or perhaps it tells you this piece is beautiful, exciting or easy. Whatever arises, don't try to change it. Just notice it. One of the fascinating things about the mind is that it's constantly assigning meaning to everything it sees. I think part of the reason for this is that we all want to feel important. Sometimes we become the hero who conquers the impossible piece. Other times we become the victim who believes we were never talented enough in the first place. Every great story has drama. Without even realising it, we often create that same drama around learning music. The music becomes covered in memories—old mistakes, old teachers, old performances, old fears and old expectations. But here's the thing... Those thoughts are not the music. The notes haven't changed. Only the story has. Your mind is an extraordinary problem-solving machine. But in order to solve problems, it first has to find problems. Watch how quickly it searches for something to fix, something to judge or something to fear. Then ask yourself: Is this actually in the music... or is it only in my thinking? Today's practice is simply to observe. Notice the labels. Notice the stories. Notice the emotions. And then gently return your attention to the music itself. You might discover that what seemed so frightening a few moments ago was simply another thought passing through your mind. I'd love to hear what you noticed today. What was the very first story your mind told you when you looked at your music?
0 likes • 2d
Beautifully said, Barbara. I think you've discovered one of the biggest shifts in learning—not trying to swallow the whole mountain at once, but simply taking the next small step. 😊 It's interesting how the mind can look at something unfamiliar and immediately create a story like, "This is going to be too hard." Yet when we break it down into smaller, manageable pieces, the story changes. Suddenly the impossible becomes possible. I also love what you said about the enjoyment increasing once you get through that initial hurdle. That's often where confidence is born—not because the music became easier, but because you became more familiar with it. Thank you for sharing your experience, Barbara. I have a feeling many people here will recognise themselves in your story. 🌿🎶
0 likes • 16h
@Veerle Mertens Beautifully observed, Veerle. 🌿 I think you've noticed something really important. The fear was still present, but it wasn't the voice you chose to follow. Curiosity and desire became stronger than the story your mind was offering, and that changed your entire experience. I also love that you became aware of the pattern itself. Once we begin to recognise these patterns, they lose much of their power over us. We realise they're just thoughts passing through—not the music itself. Thank you for sharing such an honest reflection. I think many of us will recognise ourselves in what you've written. 😊🎵
🎵 Daily Reflection 14: The Universe Did Not Create Meaningless Music
Good morning, everyone. ☀️ Today's reflection invites us to question one of the biggest assumptions we carry into our musical journey. The Universe did not create meaningless music. When we sit down to practise, it's amazing how quickly the mind begins talking. "I'm not talented enough." "Everyone else is progressing faster than me." "I played the wrong note." "I'll never get this." But here's a question... Who is actually creating that conversation? Certainly not the music. A guitar string doesn't tell you you're hopeless. A piano key doesn't judge your ability. A singing bowl doesn't compare itself to another singing bowl. Music simply vibrates. Everything else is the story we add afterwards. Try this little exercise today. Whenever you notice a fearful thought while you're practising, pause for a moment and gently question it. The Universe did not create this wrong note, and so it is not real. The Universe did not create my embarrassment, and so it is not real. The Universe did not create my lack of skill, and so it is not real. The Universe did not create people who are "more talented" than me, and so it is not real. This isn't about pretending mistakes don't happen. It's about recognising that a wrong note is simply a sound. The suffering comes from the story that follows. One of the greatest illusions is believing we're somehow separate from music. But where does the universe end? The Earth is part of the universe. Your body is part of the universe. Your instrument is part of the universe. The sound waves are part of the universe. Even the thoughts passing through your mind appear within the universe itself. In a very real sense... The universe is listening to itself through your ears. It is learning through your hands. It is expressing itself through every vibration you call music. So perhaps today's practice isn't about becoming a better musician. Perhaps it's simply about noticing how often the mind creates problems that music never did. As many of you have heard me say before...
Easy Key and guitar?
I’m a guitar beginner ( been at it 2.5 years). I wonder how the easy key applies to guitar. I have access to a chart of the Nashville Numbering System, which seems to use the same concept of numbers for the different notes of a key. Is that true; I can use the NNS instead of the Easy Key?
1 like • 3d
Great question, Barbara! 😊 The Nashville Number System and the Easy Key definitely share the same underlying idea—they both describe the relationships between notes using numbers rather than letter names. Where the Easy Key is a little different is that it's designed as a visual learning system. It lets you see scales, chords, intervals, melodies and key changes as repeating patterns across the keyboard (and those same patterns transfer beautifully to guitar as well). So yes, you can absolutely use the Nashville Number System if it already makes sense to you. The Easy Key isn't intended to replace it; it's designed to make those relationships easier to see and understand, especially if music theory has ever felt overwhelming. In fact, I'm currently working on an Easy Key version specifically for the guitar fretboard, because the same patterns exist there too—they're just laid out differently. I think you'll really enjoy it when it's ready! 🎸🎶
🌿 Reflection 006 — The Story Between the Notes
Here’s something I’ve been reflecting on today. Imagine you play one wrong note. Nothing more. Just one note. A moment later your mind says: “Everyone noticed.” “My teacher must be disappointed.” “I’m terrible at this.” But… did any of that actually happen? Or did the mind quietly fill in the blanks? One of the biggest lessons music has taught me is that we often react, not to what happened, but to the story we’ve created about what happened. The note wasn’t painful. The story was. The next time something doesn’t go to plan, try asking yourself: 🎵 What do I actually know? 🎵 What story have I added? That simple question can change everything. Sometimes the greatest breakthrough isn’t improving your playing… it’s learning to recognise when your mind is showing you something that isn’t really there. I’d love to hear your thoughts. Discussion 🎵 Have you ever assumed someone was judging your playing, only to discover they weren’t? 🎵 What’s one story your mind likes to tell you when you make a mistake? 🎵 How might your practice change if you questioned those stories a little more often?
1 like • 8d
@Mohammed Aref Beautifully said, Mohammed. I think that’s the real art—not trying to stop the mind, but becoming so present with the music that the stories naturally become quieter. And I love what you said about the “wrong” note. Context changes everything. 🎵🙏
0 likes • 3d
I love that observation, Julie. The event is usually over in a moment, but the story can keep replaying. Becoming aware of that is such a powerful shift. Thanks for sharing. 😊🎶
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Mathew Creedon
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Music Teacher / Artist/Producer / Holistic Sound Practitioner. "Transforming Lives One Note at a Time"

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Joined May 10, 2026