I just don't get how taking a casual break (Not going cold turkey) from the game leads to sudden improvement.
Edit: Oh god, it actually doesn't sound like I stopped when I reread over this, but in comparison it feels like it!
How do you know you had a sudden improvement ?Abyssinica wrote:I just don't get how taking a casual break from the game leads to sudden improvement.
I just considered the fact that I was responding to bad moves with equally bad/even worse responses a sign that I'm doing really bad and should probably stop/take a break. People that seemed strong and far off/teacher-like before didn't seem that way any more after I tried to get back into it. Maybe I'm too receptive to winning/losing streaks and think every even game should be W-L-W-L-W-LEdLee wrote:How do you know you had a sudden improvement ?Abyssinica wrote:I just don't get how taking a casual break from the game leads to sudden improvement.
You are equating winning to improvement and losing to regression -- this is not true.
You can be losing many games and are still improving;
conversely, you can be winning many games are are still regressing.
True.Joaz Banbeck wrote:More than 50% of what kyu players know is wrong. ( Don't belive this?
False logic.Joaz Banbeck wrote: When you take time off, you forget things. Since the majority of what you know is wrong, when you forget stuff, the majority of what you forget will be wrong. Thus, by taking a break, you improve.
Hi Ed,EdLee wrote:True.Joaz Banbeck wrote:More than 50% of what kyu players know is wrong. ( Don't belive this?False logic.Joaz Banbeck wrote: When you take time off, you forget things. Since the majority of what you know is wrong, when you forget stuff, the majority of what you forget will be wrong. Thus, by taking a break, you improve.
Analogy: a beginner English student learns 100 new English words (boy, cat, dog, etc.). In the beginning he gets 20 correct and 80 misspelled. He takes a break and forgets 20%. Now he spells 16 right. It's no improvement. It's regression. Same with Go. Substitute language vocabulary with Go knowledge: basic shapes, basic life-and-death, basic tesuji, etc.
I don't know where I heard this from, but someone said "When I was 8k, all I thought I had to do was learn more joseki, learn more tesuji, get better reading, and that's all I need to get passed 1d and the rest of the dan ranks. But when I got to 2d I realised I was way off and there was a lot more to it."lemmata wrote:EdLee wrote:Joaz Banbeck wrote:
Even after reaching the dan ranks, I know only a tiny bit more than kyus about basic shapes and tesujis.
Here is my rank graph; the start after the gap is about the same day I made this thread. I have played 29 ranked games and somewhere between 29-35 "serious" games since. I am trying to kick the habit of playing on autopilot and severely underestimating my opponents. (That is where the drop happened)EdLee wrote:Hi lemmata, I think once again it's time for Cargo cult science.
Speaking of which, Abyssinica, how is your data coming along ? Are you anywhere close to collecting a significant number of serious games (say 100) to show evidence of improvement, regression, stability, or other ?
Since it's only been 11 days since your OP, maybe too soon.
