Many practitioners have a misunderstanding that the longer they practice, the better, and often practice for several hours. Another is not practicing calligraphy at ordinary times, but concentrating on practicing calligraphy on weekends and holidays. In fact, both of these practices are wrong. First of all, children get tired very easily. In the end, they just pursue a lot of mechanical repetition exercises, but they can't think about the correct strokes and observe the structure and size of Chinese characters.
The second type does not practice calligraphy at ordinary times, and chooses to concentrate on practicing calligraphy on weekends. It is inevitable that children will not practice writing for a few days. It's like burning a pot of water to 80, then stopping to let it cool and then burning it, and it will never reach 100.
In fact, when we can persist in doing one thing in a very short time, the accumulated things are actually considerable.
For ordinary calligraphy learners, there is no need to be demanding about how long they spend every day, unless you want to make a great breakthrough in calligraphy, or you are determined to make achievements in calligraphy.
As the saying goes, if the method is wrong, the efforts will be in vain. There is nothing wrong with practicing calligraphy for a certain period of time, and quantitative change causes qualitative change. But don't pursue the accumulation of time too much, and you need to learn to write with your mind. It doesn't take too long to practice calligraphy every day, as long as you ensure that you practice calligraphy every day. I hope everyone who practices calligraphy can make great achievements.