I didn't feel like you were, or even Mojo, for that matter, even when he said he was. Nothing that either of you two said was bad advice imho... I just felt it wasn't very good for him at this time. I am just trying to stress to him that... he could go to a number of schools and they would all teach him the same mic techniques for the most part. Because the basic techniques are the tried and true ones. Just like the first mic most of the schools will start you on in the SM 57 and with good reason. There are tried and true methods which are taught in ANY class and I personally would like him to learn those basics before he starts putting a mic between his legs while sitting, or holding the mic, etc...
What you said eeoo is something I have encountered myself... My first time ever recording in a studio... I had to tape my guitar strings down so they would stay quiet and then play it so I could sing the songs right. I just couldn't sing them songs right without my guitar around my neck and my fingers doing the motions.

And Mojo... if it sounds good then it probably is, is a very good statement for people with well trained ears. Well trained from years of practice. But for a newcomer I just think it isn't very good advice. The first time someone said that to me, after I started trying to record professionally, my first thought was... I think all my sh+t sounds pretty good. So I decided that I cannot listen to that statement, because the stuff I thought sounded good, apparently wasn't. I realized, after sifting through a lot of BS, that I had to learn what a balanced mix was, and how to do one, FIRST. Then I could learn my own style after that. And unlearn all the bad habits I had learned doing live music... where, If it sounds good then it is good... was the golden rule. And all those tricks I had learned to eliminate feedback... useless in a studio... completely useless!
Rob