Dink Heckler wrote on 05/28/14 at 20:18:29:
I got addicted when my dad taught me; good times. Decades later, I still have the board that he made by hand, and I'm sure I'd save it if there was a fire in my house...
But now I've got to the stage where I've pretty much hung up my pawns; I'm in the rush hour of my life, with three kids and a busy job; I just can't put the time and energy into it. Now it's blitz on the internet and the daily puzzles from Chess Today. When my kids are older, I'll revisit the issue.
Also, I've come to the perhaps belated realisation that with a sedentary, analytical job, it doesn't make huge sense for me to plow a lot of time and energy into a sedentary, analytical hobby - anima sana in corpore sano and all that.
Quote:
As an electrical engineer, I struggled with that some. I've always been active (I run, surf, go to the gym, etc), but it was extremely hard for me to play well in evening club games, having used much of the same parts of my brain all day, they were fatigued.
Same problem as I have. I work with IT and have to use my brain all day. On thuesdays evenings when I play games in the local club, I often feel I can't do my best, due to tireness. Much better on weekends when I'm rested.
Thanks to all for your insightful answers and comments.
It's nice to see that other people struggle with the same problems than I do.
The two quotes above are really the things that I am struggling with the most: I am not an engineer but I work as an economist in the finance industry, hence, my job requires a lot of reading (sometimes of technical papers), excel spreadsheets, econometrics (using R most of the time), but also many oral presentations, something which, while very interesting, is also quite tiring...
Hence, I feel like I would not be able to play well after a full day's work and that also, if I do have the time, maybe going for a run would be a better idea.
Betablinx wrote on 05/28/14 at 21:03:37:
I find chess fun.
I particularly enjoy watching live commentary broadcasts of SGM tournaments. I wish Peter Leko would get more commentary roles; I've watched him commentate at the WCh match between Anand-Gelfand and Zurich 2014, he was exceptional both times.
I prefer studying chess to playing it atm, I don't like the stress involved in playing and get depressed if I lose a game due to a mistake. Studying: openings, endgames and playing through annotated game/tournament collection books are my favourite areas to spend chess study time on. I also like watching some chess content on YouTube, I've been watching Chessexplained's three 5min blitz game uploads every morning for the last several years. He deserves an award of some kind for his contribution to chess imo.
I think I am a bit in the same boat as you, i.e., enjoying more studying/reading books rather than playing. However, I think that there is a difference between just reading books and really studying a subject, whatever it is. And, I know that in the past, I had trouble with really studying chess, knowing that I was not going to really be able to test it out in practice.
As a former assistant professor, I have also read a lot about teaching, practicing, and I think one key issue about that is feedback. IMO, if you don't get to play chess competitively, you cannot get feedback on your progress, and it is hard to keep studying.
Well, maybe one solution would be to play more 30-45' games over the internet. Do you guys do that or do you mainly use ICC or Playchess for blitz?
Thanks again for your help, this is very much appreciated!