That sounds good.
Maybe a little over half a year ago, I played against some stronger people who could basically slam balls into my ribs with a sidespin loop if I started to pivot for a forehand even a little too early and gave it up. My backhand was not that great, footwork not as fast as I thought it was and forehand loop not as threatening as I thought it was, so I had a hard time. They kept looping all my long serves, often with a very solid backhand loop and flicking all my short serves unless they were exceptionally good. Their serves were either too fast, or too low and spinny.
I was surely making every single mistake in the book. It felt like they could completely read through me and didn't even break a sweat completely destroying me. To add, most of them served terribly illegal, but I don't think it mattered much at that point.
Now, they'd be hard pressed to get a single point from me if they don't really try. They miss most of their serve attacks and are forced to push, my pivot isn't readable to punish, footwork too fast to be out of position, backhand too good to reliably attack my backhand wing as a strategy and forehand too good to risk a bad return on that wing. What was great pressure some half a year ago is just adequate competition now. I'd even argue I'm perhaps at an advantage with my more consistent technique.
So, it is possible to level up quite fast if you have the needed competition. As long as you stop doing nearly everything that has won you points up to then, or at least, do it in a better way.
