The struggles on the board are delightful. Yet Go knowledge is fleeting. When I study Go, I am reminded of a passage from an old book that I enjoyed greatly, The Custer Wolf.
For in dealing with so remarkable a creature, who knows tomorrow's established fact from today's apparent hyperbole?
I have been playing on and off for 15+ years and I float somewhere within the muddy area that is shodan. I have been very lucky to know many wonderful people through Go. I've had teachers and rivals. Come to think of it, I still have rivals.
I am passionate about Go, and I try to make things interesting. Welcome to my study journal and thought repository, and thank you very much in advance for any feedback you are willing to share.
I've posted some fun/informative topics on L19 in the past. I'll link to those here first (and edit to add new ones now and then).
---Repairing dents on the surface of a goban
---Keeping track of L&D results
---Thoughts on loss aversion
---Developing powerful tesuji skills
---Blindspots in L&D problems
---My introduction
My goals are:
Share my successes with regard to systematic and deliberate L&D practice. As I work through and complete books, I'll post about them here.
Post my serious games that I have spent time self-reviewing to share with the community here and ask for advice.
Share exciting thoughts and news from my perspective as a Go player living in the New York City area (for now).
Reconstruct bad thought processes that affect me while playing through deliberate practice and feedback.
Reach 4 dan upon which I will purchase a set of slate and shell stones which I have always wanted for use on my beautiful goban.
I play moves I can't yet fully read out as a matter of fighting spirit.
I back off and sometimes don't see the obvious.
I have trouble with the natural flow that occurs in the opening.
I likely overplay... a lot.