I find that I do not know enough to solve the problems I am having. I am therefore going back and learning microtechnique consistently. This learning is giving me a lot of things to look at when something goes wrong, and a much larger palette for solving problems. And the direction that this going in, is that there are actually only a small number of microtechniques that I need to watch very carefully: - make sure you always have a finger that guides you to the next note or chord (it is called "eje"= pivot in Spanish). If moving to a new position, look for the finger that can stay on its string. If moving vertically, look for a pivot finger that stays on the same string to get another finger to the new string. - Think about how to let wrist rotation do much of the work of moving across strings. - Anchor the right hand on the 5th (or whatever convenient bass) string. I am sure I will add things as I continue learning. I am happy to have input. I am only playing exercises now. I play an occasional piece of music as a reality check. I clearly see improvement, but I also see that not all the things I have learned are automatic yet. And under time pressure, I fail to apply what I know. @Marc Adler had already predicted that applying knowledge of microtechnique to actual playing would take effort and definitely not be automatic. He is right.