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Steve Magness
@stevemagness
Charlie Parker said: “Learn your instrument. Practice, practice, practice. Then forget all that and just wail.”

Neuroscience shows he was right.

Researchers found that jazz musicians and freestyle rappers train their brains to quiet the inner critic and turn up self-expression when they perform.
Steve Magness
@stevemagness
When jazz musicians improvised inside an fMRI scanner, something fascinating happened.

The dorsolateral prefrontal cortex—the “inner critic” that evaluates, monitors, and second-guesses—went quiet.

Meanwhile, the medial prefrontal cortex, a critical part of creativity and self-expression, lit up.
Steve Magness
@stevemagness
Freestyle rappers showed the same pattern.

When rhyming on the fly, they dampened brain areas linked to self-monitoring.

The neural chatter of “Is this right? Am I messing up?” turned down.

Instead, brain regions tied to language, rhythm, and creative flow switched on.
Steve Magness
@stevemagness
For the rest of us, when we try to improvise our brain often does the opposite.

The inner critic dominates.

We overthink, hesitate, or freeze.

Thinking gets in the way of doing.
Steve Magness
@stevemagness
Experts learn to step aside.

They’ve trained enough that when the moment comes, they can loosen control.

They move from reflective to reflexive.

They trust the system they’ve built through practice and allow it to run.
Steve Magness
@stevemagness
That doesn’t mean they wing it.

Jazz greats and rap legends aren’t improvising from nothing.

They’ve drilled scales, rhymes, rhythms, and progressions endlessly.

Practice loads the system. Letting go unlocks it.
Steve Magness
@stevemagness
This is why false bravado backfires.

You can’t just “believe” your way into flow.

If the foundation isn’t there, the brain knows.

Confidence that lasts isn’t about faking it. It’s about having enough evidence in your body and mind that you can release control.
Steve Magness
@stevemagness
Real performance is a paradox: you prepare obsessively, then you let go.

You build the scaffolding, then step out into open space.

You learn to quiet the voice of judgment so the work you’ve built underneath can finally speak for itself.
Steve Magness
@stevemagness
The musician’s brain teaches us this: Creativity isn’t about thinking more or trying harder during the performance.

It’s about preparing deeply, then trusting yourself enough to let go.

Practice, practice, practice—and then just wail.
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