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Sorry this reply isn't longer. Busy day. But I did want to address something.
Eisenstein defined insanity as repeating the same action and expecting different results. Something you should think about, when you open sets with "Hey I'm Nick." If it's not working you may want to try something different. As for DHV, this is an area I have disagree slightly with the community. So take what I say as only one mans opinion.
While I do find it valuable to DHV spike. I am not big about DHV stories. Sure, if she happens to notice the stethoscope. Or I am in uniform on my way to work great, I may tell a story. For the most part I just let things like that tell the story for itself. To be in a blue uniform with an EMS patch on my chest is a nice DHV spike, plus I don't have to tell a story, which can be misconstrued as me bragging. Or more often then not, I am bragging and I just wasn't slick enough in my delivery of the story to begin with. To sum up, DHV spikes=Awesome. DHV stories=not so much.
"Hi, I'm Nick." Doesn't work. I get that. I haven't seen it work.
You said the einstein thing. I got that years ago.
But here's a story that might explain the "Hi, I'm Nick." and where I'm at with the opening part.
I played soccer. I didn't grow up with a family to teach me how and didn't have access to material with instructions on it initially. In my early childhood I never ran into people who played and I would kick around a basketball [which is bigger than a soccer ball and not meant for kicking around. Also not good for your feet]. If I was going to shoot the ball I kicked with my toes. This was wrong.
In highschool someone told me it was wrong. And not to kick with your toes when i joined the team. A lot of team mates were too busy to show me how to actually kick the ball and I didn't talk to them much outside of practice or school.
I knew kicking with my toes was incorrect and gave a very bad shot with little chance of going in the goal [still a chance... just not much of one]. I know saying "Hi, I'm Nick." is roughly the same.
I didn't know how you were supposed to kick the balls. I tried various things and didn't have access any material that showed how. Also when I asked the coach if I could sit and watch practice to learn how others kick the ball he was okay with it but I saw that all of them did something different. He told me very few actually kick it correctly but kicking with your toes was wrong. Then he was too busy to show me how to kick it [and he never thought it'd be any good so he didn't care either].
I met this guy charles at the library. He played soccer had been to camps. He knew a lot about it. He took me to a field and showed me not only how to kick the ball correctly but had me do drills all day every day for the summer of 2000. In between my sophomore and junior years.
Even if he was busy I went out and practiced and practiced and practiced. I practiced what was correct and learned to vary my shots with curve balls, knuckle balls, and so on. How to aim low or high. topspin, backspin [useless for a shot really, but still I could do it and being able to is a testament of your skill level]. I practice the placement of my non kicking foot.
I got creative and learned things Charles never taught me. I just took the CORRECT way to kick the ball and added on to it. All of this worked out really well after I know what to do and practiced practiced practiced.
"Hi, I'm Nick." is a toeball.
"[unknown...]" is kicking with the instep of your foot. I don't know this, just that it's correct and can be varied and made to suit me. I will have to practice at it. But this trial and error bullshit may or may not have discovered the unknown. The problem is I wouldn't know if I did.
In soccer I actually did make the attempt to kick the ball with the instep of my foot before meeting charles. horrible results. I thought it was the wrong way. So I tried the side of my foot. Figured that was wrong to. I was desperate enough to try the soul of my foot. Then I just didn't know which was correct and which to invest time and effort into perfecting.
Trial and error sucks balls.