This entire discussion on practicing wearing armor reminds me of how we Knights must practice our Chivalry and our Beliefs, we are not Knights nor are we chivalrous overnight. It is a gradual process of practice, practice after success, practice after making a mistake (we are human) and practicing getting back to where you were before you made that mistake. Nothing is ever easy, it would be easier to abandon Honor, Courtesy, Nobility or Courage when you are standing with the choice of sticking by your beliefs or by the Code or neglecting them in favor of mere pleasures that don't last in the long run. We have got to keep on practicing our Chivalry and it is a lifelong practice with no end date.
That was well said, Sir Joshua- well said indeed. Nothing worth having or experiencing in this life will come easy; oh sure, some thing or other may come easily to you but by and far anything else worth having, achieving or experiencing will only be done so successfully by the desire to have it and the drive to make it happen.
Keep in mind that in the past, boys were taken, usually around the age of 7 or 8 to begin squiring for a knight- this consisted of but was not limited to: cleaning and polishing the knight's armor, waiting on his pleasure when he sat at meat or received guests, setting up his tent, his bedroll, saddling and unsaddling his horses, brushing their coats, picking out stones caught in their hooves- a glorified butler, if you will. All this in addition to training in combat- learning swordplay, spearplay, horsemanship- and you had to be good, because not every squire became a knight. Chances are, you would be blooded before you turned 16, if you proved yourself in battle you may get your spurs but you'd still serve your lord unless and until you decided to go on your own and be a knight-errant and find adventure where it would find you. Life was hard, it was at times cut short rather brutally and in some ways more complex than our own as we live a life of comparative luxury- these boys and men would've slept in a barn, or on the floor or on a pallet depending on where they were; they were required to eat only after their knight had eaten, sleep only when allowed, but ready to wake at a moment's notice; lice was a commonplace thing, bathing was largely optional, a hot bath was reserved for the gentry, commoners made do with cold water, usually rivers or streams as they were to hand, general medicine was herbs, incantations and bleeding and the average life expectancy was roughly half of ours- it was a tough world to live in. Whereas we all have running water, electricity, heat, the internet, we don't go hungry, we know no real hardship compared to them, we all have cars, access to money for the most part and while most of us are serious about our calling, it really is more of a hobby for us. With that said- how into it are you? Ask yourself that, and when you have your answer, you know what you have to do.