By Molly Gebrian: As classical musicians, we tend to think that practicing as much as possible is the goal. Taking breaks and time off from practicing are not really part of our culture, and its not unusual for people to equate taking breaks with being lazy. While its true that putting in the hours is important if you want to improve, breaks are actually the most important part of practicing.
Research on the science of learning has shown that the brain physically changes when we learn something new or improve at a skill. But in order for these changes to happen, the brain needs time off from working. The analogy I use to describe this is road construction: just like people cant be driving on the road while its undergoing construction, the brain needs you to take a break so it can do its own reconstruction. Until this reconstruction has happened, you will be stuck at the same level of ability. But taking breaks will give your brain the time and space to make the necessary physical changes, and when you come back to practicing, you will be at a higher level than before.
If learning is defined as changes in the brain, that means learning happens predominantly during breaks, not when we are actively practicing. This is incredibly counterintuitive, but once you understand this principle, it can help you practice more effectively.
The video below explains a study on microbreaks, which is a great way to get started with incorporating strategic breaks into your practice sessions. Ill explain the findings of the study below if youd rather read instead of watch.
In this study, the researchers had people learn a short key-press sequence on a computer keyboard. The goal was to perform this sequence as quickly and accurately as possible. The participants in the study got to practice for 10 seconds, and then they would take a 10 second microbreak. They kept repeating this process 10 seconds of practice followed by 10 seconds of break while the researchers measured their performance.
In the end, the researchers found that the bulk of the improvement happened during the breaks, not during the practice sessions. In fact, after each microbreak, the participants would perform at a higher level than before the break. The most fascinating finding to me, though, is the brain activity they observed. The researchers found that during the breaks, the brain would do a super-fast replay of the key-press sequence, continuing to practice it 20 times faster (and backwards, which they dont really understand). And the participants werent mental practicing or anything during the 10 second microbreaks. They were just sitting there doing nothing, and yet their brains were continuing to practice in a hyper-efficient way.
What does this mean for us as musicians?
I have been using this idea with great results when I do repetitions to solidify my playing. Rather than trying to do a big batch of repetitions without any breaks, I will play a passage Im trying to solidify three times, and then Ill take a roughly 10-second break. Then I try to do three more repetitions. If all six were perfect, I move onto the next thing on my list to practice for that day. If any of the repetitions had mistakes, I identify what I think caused the mistake and start my repetitions over again from zero. I then try to do nine correct repetitions total, with a 10-second break after every three (so, three repetitions, 10-second break, three repetitions, 10-second break, three more repetitions). Any time I mess up, the count starts over from zero.
I find that a group of three repetitions before a microbreak is the sweet spot for me its enough to test whether Im consistent, but not so many repetitions at once that I get bored or unfocused. But the real key is the breaks: taking little microbreaks helps solidify my playing much more effectively than when I used to do it without breaks. I also find that my work sticks with me better over time because of the breaks, which is an added bonus.
If you want to learn more about the science of taking breaks, why it works, and ideas for incorporating this into your practicing, the video above is actually Part 4 in a longer series on the power of breaks. The full series is here:
(Click here to go straight to the playlist on Youtube.)
I hope youll try out this idea and rethink the role of breaks in your practicing. Rather than being wasted time, they are critical for learning in the most efficient and effective way possible.
You might also like:

- How to Help Your Brain Memorize Music, with Molly Gebrian
- The Science and Art of Practicing: with Molly Gebrian and Shelly Tramposh
- Music and Your Brain
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