Play lots of games
Review lots of games (preferably with someone stronger)
Do tons o' tsumego
Review pro games
Watch Baduk TV
Lather, rinse, repeat.
In Korea it was really easy to get games in real life, and playing with strong little kids was a great way to sharpen my fighting skills. I won't have that here in the stix of good ol' Michigan where the next Go club is miles and miles away, so I'll have to play on Tygem. Also, having a 9 dan teacher was awesome.
The question is, what would be the best regimen? How many games per week? I don't know anyone that's 4 stones stronger than me to review my games, so I'm gonna have to review most of them myself and do it slowly with a database to see how pros play and compare it to my own. I find that studying your mistakes and mining through your games works more so than trying to play 20 times a day. Besides I wouldn't have time for 20 serious games.
So, here's my regimen:
- At least 3 games a week but bonus for playing more.
All games are slow and serious.
At least 30 seconds thinking time per move unless it's blatantly obvious or joseki. This will help me stop playing so fast. One of my biggest weaknesses is that I play entirely too fast and make mistakes that don't need to be made.
Do at least 20 problems a day. I have plenty of tsumego books and I have to stop being so lazy and just sit through them and solve problems like I used to.
I already watch a ton of Baduk TV, so maybe take more notes and try to memorize new joseki patterns.
Study Joseki - I actually don't know very many of them as I mostly just figure them out, so I think I can crack open a joseki book I've been meaning to read but haven't.
We'll get started tomorrow. I'll play a serious game and post it here with self analysis, but would love any comments from the peanut gallery.
