This is a little hard to explain without words (in person) but here goes.
I think I a credited (maybe falsely at times) for having more knowledge than I do, this is mainly because of the way that I do and try to view the game. Tailoring specific aspect to individuals and not viewing it from a general "oh everyone starts here" type of thing.
I have been able to progress at a respectable pace given my lack of actual table time, and as I was telling my mentor yesterday (sunday) it was because I have actually gained a lot/learned a lot from my little time at the table. I studied learning material and other players pros and amateurs alike, slowing my game down (I know many disagree with slow play) and really focusing on executing above all. See I feel that speed comes after being confident in ones ability and doing things slowly first helps build that.
I still struggle with two major aspect that are difficult to improve on without outside intervention, this is some mechanical issues and a certain mental issue that I also struggle with. The fact that I don't compete as much or often as I may like or need to is also a speed bump but being worked on.
So I guess
(a) accepting my "TRUE" ability
(b) slowing my game down only increasing as I gain more confidence (PSR)
(c) practicing specific things that directly affect me or need work on.
(d) finding the "RIGHT" person as a mentor to convey with as to gain the most from the feed back
(e) a different "I want to learn/get better" attitude, what I mean is not going into anything be it practice or playing without learning from it, not just going through the motions during practice but deeply going through it to understand what is taking place and why what is happening is happening.
Those are the things that I feel have helped me to improve "Significantly" over the past few months, my biggest hurdle right now is that specific mental issue and the mechanical one that would take some time with a coach or risk prolonging the matter going solo, oh and competing/playing a bit more won't hurt either.