Playing With Chess
by JFM
Chess is a knight's game. Chess calls for action and speed. It can be daunting – you might lose respect to a 12 year old with a F in math – but it can also be the best challenge you've ever faced. True, games can be played with children, but, like playing hearts, there are few exact games. This is not chinese Go; chess is formulated to have some of the same moves. In Go, it's been said the same move is impossible. But in chess, the same move is possible.
You should never play against the computer. You should never study it. You should master chess like you would a coded philosophy book.
Wrong. You must play against more than adults. I would play against youths, against computers, even against your children. There is no need to put money on the game – you might put down one book or a dollar bill -- or a cup of coffee.
You should always quit chess for a time, forget your best play, and walk away. You should never lose the board, but sometimes you actually have to visit the book, the job, the art. You must still work. Once you get a chess board, you may just stare at it for a while. You may just play with family; bad.
Play chess outdoors. Play it online against real people. Play chess against the computer. Play it like a sport. Play it to improve your mind to action rolls. Play it to learn how your left and right brain coalesce to create strategies. Chess is military, but, like war, chess can be brutal.
Chess can be beat when it's no longer fun. You might want to quit. You might play one game and want to fold. I encourage you to code your mind better. This is work; chess can solve problems for you. Chess can help you think. Chess can help you. Chess can be addicting, and online games can last longer than 10 minutes – probably the average on untimed – so play it more. You might even play a game on your shift at work.
Chess costs little. There is little upkeep. Boards can go online and be free. Get a good board. I actually found a strong chess board in my dumpster, and it's been playing with me for a while. I tend to fear it, as I code it against myself. I make some original moves that work in other strategy games, such as Go and cards. You have to feint some confidence and no confidence.
Yes, chess is a game. You do sit down to play it, instead of running miles like another mind sport called football or soccer, but it creates a discipline for you and makes you think differently.
by JFM
Chess is a knight's game. Chess calls for action and speed. It can be daunting – you might lose respect to a 12 year old with a F in math – but it can also be the best challenge you've ever faced. True, games can be played with children, but, like playing hearts, there are few exact games. This is not chinese Go; chess is formulated to have some of the same moves. In Go, it's been said the same move is impossible. But in chess, the same move is possible.
You should never play against the computer. You should never study it. You should master chess like you would a coded philosophy book.
Wrong. You must play against more than adults. I would play against youths, against computers, even against your children. There is no need to put money on the game – you might put down one book or a dollar bill -- or a cup of coffee.
You should always quit chess for a time, forget your best play, and walk away. You should never lose the board, but sometimes you actually have to visit the book, the job, the art. You must still work. Once you get a chess board, you may just stare at it for a while. You may just play with family; bad.
Play chess outdoors. Play it online against real people. Play chess against the computer. Play it like a sport. Play it to improve your mind to action rolls. Play it to learn how your left and right brain coalesce to create strategies. Chess is military, but, like war, chess can be brutal.
Chess can be beat when it's no longer fun. You might want to quit. You might play one game and want to fold. I encourage you to code your mind better. This is work; chess can solve problems for you. Chess can help you think. Chess can help you. Chess can be addicting, and online games can last longer than 10 minutes – probably the average on untimed – so play it more. You might even play a game on your shift at work.
Chess costs little. There is little upkeep. Boards can go online and be free. Get a good board. I actually found a strong chess board in my dumpster, and it's been playing with me for a while. I tend to fear it, as I code it against myself. I make some original moves that work in other strategy games, such as Go and cards. You have to feint some confidence and no confidence.
Yes, chess is a game. You do sit down to play it, instead of running miles like another mind sport called football or soccer, but it creates a discipline for you and makes you think differently.
Comments
Post a Comment