I’m Bad at Chess . . .

in #kindnesslast month

Image by @bitterirony using ChatGPT

. . . and I’m fine with that!

Back in my running days, I used to love to read the article that was on the last page of every Runners World magazine called “The Penguin Chronicles”. It was written by a guy named John Bingham (aka “The Penguin”) who knew he was always going to be in the back of the pack at any race but loved it just the same. He celebrated the camaraderie of being out on the course early in the morning with like-minded folk and having a grand day out even if he came in last. Well, that about sums up my chess tournament life.

I love going to chess tournaments even though I know I’m most likely to end up near the bottom of the rankings sheet on day 3. First of all, it is one of the rare opportunities I have to spend several hours away from my phone. Playing a game in a tournament is a straight-up meditation. The room is almost completely silent except for the soft click of pieces being exchanged and you are staring at the board for hours thinking of nothing besides, “How can I improve my position while protecting my pieces?”

Also, losing is all a matter of perspective. One of the things my adult chess playing friends often complain about is losing to children. And I do mean children. Go to any serious tournament these days and you will see competitive players as young as six tearing up the boards. But I will tell you that I’d rather lose to an 8 year old any day than some Grumpy McGrumpface grownup. The last time this happened to me I lost to a girl who was about 9 and she was delighted when I resigned. There was no question I had just made her day and she couldn’t wait to tell her family she had beat that “old man” over there. I smiled right back at her happy to have been a part of someone’s good day. We all need more of those.

I will, of course, continue to work on my game. I love to study openings (c4 anyone?) and read about clever tactics. I’m not opposed to winning now and again, I am just not going to make my enjoyment of the game, and especially tournaments, dependent on it. So if you see me in the lobby of a cheap hotel drinking bad coffee and chatting with someone holding a funny looking clock, I probably just lost my morning session game and am speculating as to who I might be paired with in the afternoon. After lunch!

Sort:  

I've never been a serious chess player, but I can imagine you can study it forever. I just read that the chess columnist for The Guardian has been doing that job for 70 years! It does not surprise me that some kids are really good. I see some doing music stuff online that is beyond me. I'll just be the old man they can beat.

!BEER

I didn‘t know that about The Guardian, I will check it out. I remember that The Scotsman used to have a chess column so good I was reading it when I lived in Dallas before everything was online. Maybe we can play a game at our next meet-up!

Hehehehe... That's a great attitude, but I doubt that you are "that" bad a chess player... I know one that you will beat easily... I remember I liked playing chess as a kid, and one day, in my teenage days, I played against my uncle... He destroyed me... lol... and took my will to play chess... 😃

I suppose I should take your advice and look behind the competitiveness of the game... 😉

Oh I hate to hear those kinds of stories but yes, there is so much to appreciate in the game besides who wins any given match-up. The history, the art of the pieces, the games happening at the elite level. 🎵All I am saying, is give chess a chance! 🎵

Totally off-topic and irrelevant, but your lyrics reminded me of this... (sorry about it 😂)

bake.jpeg

"There was no question I had just made her day... I smiled right back at her happy to have been a part of someone’s good day. We all need more of those."

I think it is wonderful to engage in a pursuit which one enjoys, whether one is good at it or not. I loved the story of the little girl and how you were happy to have made her day! Kudos to you for your attitude! 😊

!PIMP

Congratulations you have been manual curated and upvoted by @ecency

Congratulations @bitterirony! You have completed the following achievement on the Hive blockchain And have been rewarded with New badge(s)

You received more than 2500 upvotes.
Your next target is to reach 2750 upvotes.

You can view your badges on your board and compare yourself to others in the Ranking
If you no longer want to receive notifications, reply to this comment with the word STOP

I'm betting the first time you heard the "I beat that old man" the "old man" characterization hit harder than losing. I had several of those 'old lady' times with my niece when she was growing up but they were more "Oh look at the old fashioned car"... she's seeing an antique and I'm seeing a VW Beetle.