pull down to refresh

Shoving it here (bc we gotta help our frailing updog woof friend #853264) and because chess is health/spiritual (at my low non-elite level anyway) moreso than a game/sport. (Also, I don't post in the sports territory—except that one time, #848831 —so what's a dude to do??)
This happened today.
"wow, fantastic!"
yeah, not really. It's like bitcoin hitting all-time highs these days; I feel like I deserve to be here, just like I feel (think? expect? predict?) that bitcoin ought to be in the six or seven digits.
Now that I'm back at around the highest chess levels I've ever been, it just feels like order has been restored lol. Having reached my peak 4-5 months back—and then seen a bitcoin-like collapse—it's all just balanced now.

Here's my spiritual take.
I haven't been doing my puzzles or working or studied openings (even though I have some courses I bought/subscribed to and used for twenty minutes...). Nothing is materially different about my understanding of chess today compared to last week, last month, or six months ago. Except, that it's materially, directly, objectively, proof-in-the-pudding right there differently.
The edge (#735212) between winning and losing is so unbelievably small: The narrow win-loss ratio (1 year + 90 days) means the 12-13 games I average in a day rarely manifest in the results.
I eke out a microscopic edge, balancing always on a knife's edge. Worse than the gym, I imagine.
And now check this rollercoaster volatility:

Why Chess Is Spiritual

While it's an objective game (open info, no room of luck or chance), my own discipline, concentration, calculation, estimation, or time usages are not. They're all under my control.... or frequently not, as it were. It often feels like something else possesses me (#844171).
Making errors or straight-up missing something obvious is altogether different than losing because you got outplayed. I don't mind losing when my opponent get the better of me, but absolutely hate losing when I make stupid choices/don't see what's right there.
The anger and self-hatred that it unleashes on a regular basis is unbelievable. Foreign. Alien.
Recognizing my own behavior makes my chess playing an indicator of my life flow, my state of mind, my worries, or emotional turmoil. Even though it's objectively a neutral game of open info, it becomes a battle of mindset and physical/mental relaxation. A matter of health, not raw calculation or a matter of chance. Magical, really.
This is how I put it in a Nostr post way back when:
While chess is an open info, objective game it's so unbelievably spiritual and psychological as well: I play better when I'm calm, life is in order, and there are no immediate distractions. If I'm annoyed, haven't moved my body, worry about money or work, or there's something else bidding for my attention, I play noticeably worse. Nothing feels more soul-crushing than when I'm on that downward trajectory, losing hundreds of points in a few days. But it's just small margins shifting—shooting me in one direction or another. Over time they correct themselves, law of large numbers in operation.
Keep that life lesson in mind, Stackers. Small improvements, invisible on their own, even in a noisy and volatile environment, if repeated day in and day out, eventually create progress.
Just keep at it.
I suspect you will enjoy this Marginal Differences piece written by @frostdragon
reply
beautiful!
reply
Nice, what is your favorite opening to play?
reply
Jobava London with white. Got super comfortable/familiar with it; lots of spicy and ways for black to go wrong but if they play it well, I still get a pleasant position
I should be branching out. Any suggestions? (wanna beef up my Vienna too, but then I get smashed with a bunch of Sicilians I don't understand)
reply
No haha I'm a noob. Well, not total noob, but at 1500 you're definitely better. But my daughter is getting into chess a bit and was wondering about some good opening systems to learn.
reply
Best advice I've heard is to just go with something. Whatever catches her eye, has an interesting name etc.
I play some Scandinavians too with black but can never really get them to work for me :/
reply
87 sats \ 1 reply \ @siggy47 17 Jan
12-13 games I average in a day
My God! How the hell do you have time to sleep?
You write, edit, read an enormous number of books, and you play all this chess (1502 rank!). Are you really only one human being?
reply
hahah lol.
They're 3-minute/5-minute games (and sometimes shorter, right, bc I fuck up or dude gets checkmated). And we all gotta go to the loo, wait for the coffee to brew etc.
And as we learn, I've been slacking in the reading department (only 22 last year, on avg one every two weeks) #838984
reply
I play on Zen Mode Lichess because I get tilted if losing rating points. I like how you seem to have reached your own zen state whereby you have turned the ratings grind into something enjoyable to you. I like the comparisons to Bitcoin price too. I try not to check the price like I try not to see my rating. I wish Clarke moody had Zen mode but then I suppose that would defeat the point.
reply
because I get tilted if losing rating points. I should consider that
reply
Nowhere do we specify physical ~HealthAndFitness.
Mental and spiritual topics are welcome as well. Whatever keeps you in peak condition.
reply
I prefer to play Rapid 10 minutes games, and what is interesting stuck around 1500 on chesscom too. It is equal to 1700 of lichess
This game is really helps me to escape from background noise and mess
reply
Just keep at it.
reply
0 sats \ 0 replies \ @mod 17 Jan
🚩 This post might be more relevant and engaging in the ~gaming or ~charts_and_numbers territory.
reply