Spiritual Guidance: When is a good time to start healing?

Every week (usually), Spiritual Guidance will offer practical insight for priests of the holy profession. Your host is Matt Low, the grand poobah of World of Matticus and a founder of No Stock UI, a UI and addons blog for WoW.
I'm in the midst right now of a possible guest appearance on WoW Rookie for healers looking to get started. It should be finished within the next week or so. One question that was asked is when is a good time or level to start healing? At what point does a priest transition from leveling and wrecking mobs to healing raids and the like?
I had to dig deep and really think about this for a while. Obviously healing didn't start when I dove into raiding. I picked up some of the basics of it before. Dungeons and instances? Yeah, 5 mans helped but could I stretch it back even further? The moment I started healing was when I grouped with other players out in the world. It set the foundation for the lessons I would pick up later on.
This week, I'm going to do my best to reconstruct the path I took from being a leveling player to an end game raiding healer.
Group quests
I started out approaching group quests in an every-man-for-himself manner. I had no understanding nor appreciation of threat. In groups, we would all pool our kills and go after targets independently. After all, it was the most cost-effective method of questing. Eventually, my friends and I ran into "Elite" quests which required multiple people to complete.
It was through these elite quests that something clicked within me and I finally had a grasp of what I was supposed to do. We were out in Hillsbrad somewhere. My friend's warrior and my priest were out doing the thing that we did best: Wading through murloc corpse after corpse as we demolished the entire place. Eventually, we reached a point where we had unknowingly backed ourselves into a terrible spot. All the murlocs around us had respawned. To make matters worse, there were a few naga around that seemed to be inching closer. We tried to gradually clear a path back to Southshore but now we were getting overwhelmed. My friend already slapped on a shield. He did an ability which attracted the oversized fish (and saved me).
That's when I stopped trying to kill them and realized that the only way we would escape this is if I kept him alive and let him do the work instead. I did what any panicking, self-respecting priest would do. I targeted my warrior friend and slammed whatever healing spells I could to keep him alive. Renew, Heal, and whatever spells I had was used to keep him alive. It felt like a long time, but soon there was a pretty ring of murlocs and nagas that surrounded us.
Of course, we learned our lesson the first time and hoofed it back to the nearest Alliance town as soon as possible.
On a side note, it wasn't until very long after that I paired up with a mage and discovered the power of AoE grinding.
All these little adventures helped introduce me to the real basic idea of healing. If you can keep your party members alive, they can do the rest of the work for you.
Dungeon healing
The next stage in healing development is to run 5-man dungeons. The first instance where I had to heal full time was Gnomeregan. Deadmines and such weren't intense enough to the point where I had to focus explicitly on healing. I ended up DPSing half the time anyway.
Of all the instances though, Gnomeregan wasn't exactly my favourite. It taught me some extra valuable lessons. I had to actually pay attention to where I was standing especially with patrols and the like. Each pull was handled methodically one by one. We tried the blitz approach at one point but realized that there is a linear relationship between pull speed and healer mana.
There was enough damage being tossed around that warranted my full attention. At this stage, things like gearing and healing "rotations" are distant. You're struggling with keeping your party alive using every spell available. More often, the healing was going to be directed at a single person (usually the tank). But there would always be that person who was DPSing the wrong target.
Whoops, bad idea on their part.
I didn't let them die because I wanted to. I let those players die because I had to. I was too afraid to peel off the main tank and heal other players because I felt that if I did, the main tank would drop. As I kept running more and more dungeons, I grew more comfortable with multi-target healing. Concepts were picked up such as sneaking heals on other players. Dungeon healing didn't have all the different variables that "world healing" had (like opposing faction players). It certainly helped shape me to become a better healer.
Raid healing
The next logical step in healing would come at the end of the game. I had run Sunken Temple, Blackrock Depths, Stratholme and other such instances enough that I felt I could move on. When you're making the transition from 5 man to 20 or 40 man parties, you start developing a bit of a anxiety because now there's more people to be responsible for. Luckily, there would always be someone who established healing assignments. Instead of panicking and trying to take care of everyone, each healer was responsible for a certain amount of players.
As an aside, one of the best healing quests I did was when I was working on my Benediction quest. That's when I toggled on nameplates. It was a tense quest that challenged priests to prioritize heals and targets. If too many NPCs died on their way to the safe zone, it was game over.
Thinking back on it now, it would've been nice if there were more quests similar in nature to Benediction for healing priests. I wince whenever I hear of healers who have just finished leveling to max level and decide to start healing by jumping into raids. You have to walk before you run. What ends up happening is once they're exposed to healing at such a tedious level, new players become overwhelmed and shy away from it in the future.
So when is a good time to start healing?
The answer is anytime is a good time to start healing. The sooner you start, the sooner you develop simple healing skills. It doesn't matter if you're healing for other people in quests, healing in PvP, or healing in raids. You're going to be healing no matter what.
Filed under: Priest, Analysis / Opinion, (Priest) Spiritual Guidance






Reader Comments (Page 1 of 3)
ajkcupcrazy Dec 1st 2009 7:11PM
Honestly, on my druid, I just started healing raids. I set up Healbot, and just practiced a little bit in Alterac Valley, and it seemed to work.
Creating a premade character on the PTR and running the new dungeons helps too =). That's what I did back in TBC (my healer toon hit max level in WotLK, not TBC) and it seemed to help.
~Kudo
Anathemys Dec 1st 2009 7:36PM
I also test ran a druid healer on the PTR several times and decided I liked it. Started my own druid awhile ago, and the first time I healed was level 17 in Warsong Gulch. Now, besides dungeons, bg's are the most I heal.
Rifter Dec 2nd 2009 12:22PM
I have a druid that was dinged to 60 via refer a friend. After outfitting the toon out, I headed out to battlegrounds to learn how to heal. I have Grid, and it is fairly easy. I have a shaman and priest healer as well. I loath healing BGs with my shaman, but the priest and druid are fairly easy.
Josée Dec 1st 2009 7:17PM
When is a good time to stop reading this chronicle??
I am very sorry but this should go into the rookie chronicle, not the Spiritual Guidance's one.
Most of your readers already are 80 and for most raiding.
What about the coming priests changes in Icecrown ?
What about the priest T10 very miserable bonuses?
Finnicks Dec 1st 2009 7:23PM
Hello, Josee.
The answer to your concern lies in your own post. "Most of the readers". Sorry if the column isn't catering to your every need every week, but not every priest character is level 80. Some of us are level 80s who are levelling a priest for the first time.
Just because you didn't benefit from this article, doesn't mean no one did.
Stop being selfish.
Jimmy Dec 1st 2009 7:28PM
Thank you Finnicks, you just typed the best reply to a hate post I have ever seen. It is true, not everything is 80... the class itself is the subject here, not the endgame part specifically. I appreciate this for people that want to know this kind of stuff, but others think it is unimportiant, "Josée".
~Ibanthemage~
Calybos Dec 1st 2009 9:16PM
I keep seeing this claim... "Most players are at 80," "Most players only care about raiding."
Where's the numbers to back this up? ARE most players sitting around at 80, or do a lot of the 80s simply assume everyone's done exactly what they've done?
Tyrnas Dec 1st 2009 9:58PM
In all fairness to both Mr. Low and Josee, there is a legitimate complaint recently with the Spiritual Guidance article that it does not provide much useful information to the raiding Priest. Little to no guidance is offered on the shadow spec, and much of the other advice presented often seems to cover a general range of healing advice.
What I feel the readers of this column are looking for is, in a word, depth. Mr. Low, write to us about discipline and the concept of damage prevention vs healing throughput it demonstrates. Or about Holy and the myriad of choices the Priest is presented with through which to heal his group. This is not information that is useful solely to the level endgame raider, but it *is* information that is useful to them.
In the first sentence, you mentioned you were currently working on a piece for WoW Rookie. In the last paragraph, you wrote that anytime is a good time to start healing. If, sir, that is an accurate summary of your article (which it is) then you have, in fact, provided us the readers with nothing of substance.
Yes, this site is free. Yes, this information is presented somewhere else. Yes, there is a wide variety of players reading this site. But we are all here because we find the articles provided to be interesting and relevant. If they cease to be so (and your past few articles, sir, I'm afraid were not very good) then we will stop visiting this site. We are not a paying consumer base, but without traffic, what good is this column?
Please, you're better than this, and people have a legitimate right to demand that you live up to that.
Khanmora Dec 2nd 2009 9:17AM
Tyrnas,
Matt is right, you can start healing at any time. You can begin to pvp and now level that way, from lvl 10 on. I love healing in bg's it's one of my favorite things to do. I know people that simply quested through the first 10 levels and from there only did instances and pvp to level their healers. It is all completely dependent on the person behind the keyboard which Matt conveys quite well, imo.
If people would prefer more in depth discussion, there are a lot of other sites that are specifically geared for priests, including Matt's own blog, that are much better resources than this. WoW.com has always been a generalized resource, they have the largest and probably most diverse readership in comparison to most other blogs.
It doesn't take much for one to simply click on World of Matticus at the top of the post.
Wyred Dec 2nd 2009 12:02PM
While I understand people might be looking for more depth and raiding articles, exactly what are you expecting the columnist to write about? Priest healing hasn't changed since 3.1, there's nothing new to write about. 3.3 won't see many changes either, though I expect some fight-specific columns. But at the end of the day, short of some revolutionary new idea, there's not much to discuss on priest healing that hasn't been done to death already; you want raiding advice, go to EJ, they've got pages and pages of the stuff. In the meantime, why not enjoy this slice of nostalgia?
MadMac10 Dec 2nd 2009 2:19PM
Bullshit!
As a hunter who has pretty much hit an endgame wall, I rolled a priest alt to fill in downtime. Knowing nothing about healers, I trolled everywhere I could find for information about leveling a priest. This is the first time I've come across any information about being a low-level healer.
Thank you very much!
Keveline Dec 16th 2009 8:33AM
Anytime you say "most", "all", "everyone", whatever, you're probably wrong.
Personally I enjoyed this article, I have a Pally main, a Mage alt and will roll a Priest next. Whether it's for noobs or not, this type of article definitely falls under "Spiritual Guidance".
Jimmy Dec 1st 2009 7:24PM
Another good one, thanks matt!!
~Ibanthemage~
Bonksy Dec 1st 2009 7:52PM
Another useless one, thanks Ibanthemage!!
Jimmy Dec 2nd 2009 12:33AM
Oh, let's see yours?
Bonksy Dec 2nd 2009 3:15PM
Asslicker
Ed Dec 1st 2009 7:25PM
I strongly recommend healing as soon as possible, aka, Deadmines/SFK. The sooner the better, its not that you can't pick up the skill to do it, it's that you want the confidence when you are doing it.
I have been healing as priest for years, I recently power leveled a druid. My first heal was in a heroic. If it were not for my extensive knowledge of healing add-ons and the nature of damage taken in groups and how I was going to handle it I don’t know how well I would have done. I was nervous, but it was cake. Trees are so OP right now but that is another topic.
I will say if it not for being a healer for years, leveling 1-80 without healing is not a wise choice.
Dual Spec ASAP.
You want to get use to your healing add-ons and know what click actions do what and you want them in instant "muscle memory" before you start healing anything remotely difficult.
Jimmy Dec 1st 2009 7:29PM
You couldn't have said it better :)
Vaulkner Dec 1st 2009 8:31PM
I agree that if you are thinking about picking up healing, patch 3.3 is the time. You can even get started on the PTR if you are afraid of developing a reputation for sucking :p.
I've been experimenting with a resto druid and resto shammy on the PTR - the new random dungeon lfg tool makes it so incredibly painless and fun to run 5 mans.
And yes, trees are ridiculously OP at healing lol. I've healed with a disc priest, shammy, and druid. The other two always felt like atleast a bit of a challenge/struggle. On the druid I'd do everything short of mousing over the grid, closing my eyes and spam clicking - and everyone would live lol.
Muse Dec 2nd 2009 1:34AM
It's good to get into the spirit of using the spells available, but one of the hardest choices while out and about in the world at large is knowing when that extra little amount of DPS you can output, that will kill the enemy faster, is the right medicine for the situation, and when to start healing and letting someone else kill the things. It's not always as cut and dry, if my priest is the one with the theoretically higher DPS and the friend I'm with can't take the beating? Getting rid of the enemies faster as opposed to outlasting them might be key.
It's one of the things that makes the priesty waltz so fun. Have to know when to add that extra spin to the next step.