Comments on https://lichess.org/@/avetik_chessmood/blog/37-lessons-from-chess-that-shaped-my-life/qIyiqC3Y
Comments on https://lichess.org/@/avetik_chessmood/blog/37-lessons-from-chess-that-shaped-my-life/qIyiqC3Y
Comments on https://lichess.org/@/avetik_chessmood/blog/37-lessons-from-chess-that-shaped-my-life/qIyiqC3Y
Happy birthday to you!
"Which insight speaks to you the most?" * The last indeed. Paraphrasing it: the more you love the game, the more it loves you.
Nice blog!
Btw, is it only me who sees it with some weird backslashes now?
Like this: 3. Right Mood - Right Move!
I guess that Lichess has changed the way of displaying numbering in the blogs, it looks like a bug. (Not your mistake, it's in my blogs as well and it wasn't there.) Hopefully Lichess corrects that soon.
Happy birthday!
@ILikeBlitz said in #3:
Nice blog!
Btw, is it only me who sees it with some weird backslashes now?
Like this: 3. Right Mood - Right Move!
I guess that Lichess has changed the way of displaying numbering in the blogs, it looks like a bug. (Not your mistake, it's in my blogs as well and it wasn't there.) Hopefully Lichess corrects that soon.
The Lichess bug with the backslashes has been quickly corrected, and they disappeared from my comment as well.
happy belated birthday!!
Great insights, many are resonating. Actually I thought of writing/compiling a book based on similar insights, only that they can be more profound and detailed (obviously, due to the lengthier format) maybe even with the real life examples from amateurs and pros.
E.G.: Your rule 4 says "think before you move" and also "trust your intuition" which unveils a conflict — where do thinking end and intuition begin? or if we assume they are harmonious and simultaneous then what shall we do when they do argue?
Also life is full of tough-choice scenarios, when we can't choose one "move" over another. In chess I usually keep the emotions of finding a good move, and then I try to find something even better (being calm because of certainty of having something good already, even if the better one is not found — I am happy, if it is found — usually taking a while was worth it because the initial plan was a blunder). I guess Kramnik said something like this (when he could speak something worth listening to).
Many things also correspond with the famous "Thinking Fast and Slow" by Daniel Kahneman (in my native language this book is titled: Think Slow, Decide Fast).
If it is of any interest, feel free to get in touch with me, I'll be happy if all these ideas find any development.
This blog post offers such a refreshing take on community dynamics. Working as a digital strategist in Pakistan, I spend my days analyzing the technical flow of high-traffic platforms. It is quite a relief to play on your phone with mostbet when I need a quick break from work. This forum is the perfect antidote to the high-pressure digital world I navigate daily.