So i still have depression and im constantly bored, i feel like a loser who cant do anything right. I want to let my creativeness out, make something i can share with the world or family, but im probably dreaming too big. I cant stand being depressed and bored, it stinks, everyone tells me to work out but i lack the motivation to do so.

i usually just watch youtube all day while complaining to family members that have no idea what to do about me.

    • i second this and recommend Piano/Keyboard.

      A cheap Keyboard is probably found for 40-50 bucks online and it is a good starting point to also get into the music theory.

      Still the skill ceiling is practically endless.

      • @[email protected]
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        101 year ago

        Keyboard is good. I personally would recommend bass guitar if you like rock music. If you can save up $200-300 and buy a used Squire Precision or Squire Jazz bass, it will literally last you years as long as you change the strings regularly and learn how to do an at-home setup.

        You can pick up the basics and start jamming with people really fast, but the skill ceiling is deceptively high. Bassists are the hardest to find in any band.

        The instrument is fun as hell too.

    • @Zombiepirate
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      101 year ago

      Ukulele is a fun starting instrument, and you can get a serviceable one for ~$50.

      Tons of YouTube tutorials, too.

      • @[email protected]
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        21 year ago

        Ukulele is such an underrated instrument too! It gets ragged on for no reason at all. I’ve been playing guitar fairly seriously for over two decades and have great guitars, but 90% of the time I find myself with my shitty 10 dollar, plastic-looking (paint) ukulele that has a hole on the back because it was thrown at a wall and writing more songs and still finding new things for playing guitar, just because. My playing transformed once I bought that little thing. I’ve written my best songs on it.

        • @Zombiepirate
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          21 year ago

          Yeah I’d played steel strings for years, but picked up the uke my kid had (but never played) at the beginning of the pandemic. Played that thing nonstop and then got my own. Also got a nylon string guitar because I loved playing fingerstyle on uke so much. Like you said, it changed how I played guitar.

    • @Astrealix
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      71 year ago

      Plus it’s great to just dump your emotions into as well — especially if you try and learn how to improvise, which is easier than you’d think!

    • @[email protected]
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      31 year ago

      100%
      You’ll feel great teaching yourself an instrument. Dive right into it. Look up simple things at first, and practice it. Then look up another thing that you don’t how to do and practice it. The time goes by fast and before you know it you realize you understand it.

      It’s an amazing feeling.