Yes I do! When I was younger it didn't play so big role, actually it didn't bother me at all, but when I got older and wiserBill Spight wrote:Do you have the same aversion to losing at chess?Katoana wrote: I have played chess for about 40 years
Fear of losing...
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Katoana
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Re: Fear of losing...
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Katoana
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Re: Fear of losing...
Thanks Cassandra! And thanks to everyone! I'm so surprised that so many has replied to my msg.Cassandra wrote:You are not playing a game of Go AGAINST your current opponent, but WITH him.Katoana wrote:Last saturday I played two games (having 6 and 5 stones handicap) against my friend. I won both. I was so nervous that my hands were shaking.
Your opponent helps you to discover more knowledge about yourself.
Yes, you are right, I can now understand the AGAINST/WITH difference!
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Bill Spight
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Re: Fear of losing...
A few comments.Katoana wrote:Yes I do! When I was younger it didn't play so big role, actually it didn't bother me at all, but when I got older and wiserBill Spight wrote:Do you have the same aversion to losing at chess?Katoana wrote: I have played chess for about 40 yearsit has started to bother me a lot.
First, the fact that your aversion also includes chess suggests that it is more general, perhaps even affecting other aspects of your life.
Second, the fact that it has changed over time indicates that the problem is not your personality, but something more ephemeral.
Third, countering phobias is something that psychotherapists are good at, and have been for decades. You might find brief therapy beneficial, especially if the problem is generalized.
Good luck!
The Adkins Principle:
At some point, doesn't thinking have to go on?
— Winona Adkins
Visualize whirled peas.
Everything with love. Stay safe.
At some point, doesn't thinking have to go on?
— Winona Adkins
Visualize whirled peas.
Everything with love. Stay safe.
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Re: Fear of losing...
I disagree - if your goal is to win then you are against him. if you don't care and only want to experiment tonlearn, it is with him.Cassandra wrote:You are not playing a game of Go AGAINST your current opponent, but WITH him.Katoana wrote:Last saturday I played two games (having 6 and 5 stones handicap) against my friend. I won both. I was so nervous that my hands were shaking.
Your opponent helps you to discover more knowledge about yourself.
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Bill Spight
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Re: Fear of losing...
Cassandra wrote:You are not playing a game of Go AGAINST your current opponent, but WITH him.Katoana wrote:Last saturday I played two games (having 6 and 5 stones handicap) against my friend. I won both. I was so nervous that my hands were shaking.
Your opponent helps you to discover more knowledge about yourself.
Every game with a winner and loser requires both competition and cooperation.Abyssinica wrote: I disagree - if your goal is to win then you are against him. if you don't care and only want to experiment tonlearn, it is with him.
The Adkins Principle:
At some point, doesn't thinking have to go on?
— Winona Adkins
Visualize whirled peas.
Everything with love. Stay safe.
At some point, doesn't thinking have to go on?
— Winona Adkins
Visualize whirled peas.
Everything with love. Stay safe.
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Katoana
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Re:
Hmmm... let's just say that I'm living in the northern hemisphere.EdLee wrote:Wow! Are you near the North Pole for research ?Katoana wrote:from near the North Pole (well, almost).
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Hi Katoana,Katoana wrote:Hmmm... let's just say that I'm living in the northern hemisphere.
We're practically neighbors!
You ask a very common question. If you do a bit of search here on the forum,
you'll find others have also asked very similar to identical questions as yours.
Some ask about online anxieties. Some ask about face-to-face anxieties.
And the kind folks here provide similar to identical replies as the ones already given above.
With the expected disagreements, even with a question like this. Welcome to the internets.
Along with the usual suspects: normal 50% win-loss, nothing to fear but fear itself,
fear specific to Go or in other aspects of your life, what are your goals in Go, etc. etc.,
here's my usual glib --
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xed_over
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Re: Fear of losing...
This resonates with me.Katoana wrote:Thanks daal! You are absolutely right!daal wrote:I think that many who have this feeling equate losing with being stupid. It's just not the case. People win or lose because of their go skills and go performance, and while that may reflect other aspects of a person (for example, I recently had the realization that precision is not really my thing, and that this probably accounts for a chunk of my losses), it does not mean that a person is dumb, bad, incompetent or any of the other epithets we paint on the mirror when we play poorly. If you are berating yourself when you lose, stop. You played poorly because you didn't know how to play better and you made one of the zillion possible game losing moves. So what? It's not a big deal, and you are no less of a person because of it.It is my Go skill that needs to be upgraded, not necessarily my personality! It should be fun to play and I'm taking it too seriously. But that is in my personality! That's the problem.
People are always asking me why I don't play anymore (my most recent tournament game was 2009), and I've never quite been able to put my finger on it -- until now perhaps. I too hate losing. And I feel stupid when I don't improve as much or as quickly as others, especially after so many years at it.
Don't get me wrong -- I love this game. I enjoy watching/reviewing (even memorizing) high quality games. I enjoy teaching the game to beginners (and it doesn't bother me to lose those games). And I love being involved in the community.
So I try to tell myself to equate it with baseball. The best batting averages are still such a very low percentage of success. So I shouldn't care if I lose.
And I tell people that its actually possible to lose every game, but still improve your skill (I have anecdotal examples from several of my own "students" who refuse to take enough handicap to beat me, but as I improve, so do they, yet they still lose every game)
After all, even if I lose, I still win -- because I can learn something from the game. So unless I'm playing for rank (or trophy) -- which I don't do any more -- I no longer care if I win or lose. I only play for fun and learning.
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Re: Fear of losing...
If you know something is true, and act as if it were not, then what you are doing is deluding yourself. By calling it a matter of your personality, you imply that lying to yourself is necessary for your self-definition. I don't think that this is the case. Taking go too seriously is not something that you have to do, it's something you choose to do. We all have voices in our heads that chatter away incessantly about the way things ought to be and what we should be doing instead of what we are doing and what saps we are for not doing everything better. Paying too much attention to these voices instead of doing what we are doing is just a bad habit. My serious suggestion is to look into mindful meditation to practice focusing on what is actually on the table as opposed to what your mind may be dishing up.Katoana wrote:Thanks daal! You are absolutely right!daal wrote:I think that many who have this feeling equate losing with being stupid. It's just not the case. People win or lose because of their go skills and go performance, and while that may reflect other aspects of a person (for example, I recently had the realization that precision is not really my thing, and that this probably accounts for a chunk of my losses), it does not mean that a person is dumb, bad, incompetent or any of the other epithets we paint on the mirror when we play poorly. If you are berating yourself when you lose, stop. You played poorly because you didn't know how to play better and you made one of the zillion possible game losing moves. So what? It's not a big deal, and you are no less of a person because of it.It is my Go skill that needs to be upgraded, not necessarily my personality! It should be fun to play and I'm taking it too seriously. But that is in my personality! That's the problem.
Patience, grasshopper.
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Re: Fear of losing...
This is something that happened to me last month. I studied a lot, then lost so many games that I lost confidence in myself.Katoana wrote:I begin to study Go books and play through games of old Masters. I even start to memorize some games. But, when I start to play games in the Net, or against computer (CS2013), or against my friend, I'm so frustrated after a lost game, that I don't like to play anymore.
I was telling myself that it was just the usual symptom of assimilation of the new knowledge, but it didn't seem to improve after some time.
Eventually, I found one of the culprits to be frustration. When I am frustrated and I want to do better, things only get worse !
A good sign that I am not playing properly is when I don't use all my thinking time. A solution is not to play any stone before having answered the question "what if my opponent answers there ?". When I am frustrated, I rush for moves that seem best, but I omit further reading, which decreases my ability a lot.
Another thing that I'm loosing when I am frustrated is a fundamental principle that is not often taught in book : to pause the reading and count the game to see who is ahead.
Two fundamental strategic principles that no reading ability can compensate for are :
1)During the Fuseki, pause the reading and check for the status of all groups of stones. The priority is to cure our own weak groups, then to attack the opponent's weak groups.
2)During the chûban, as soon as all groups are more or less stable, pause the reading and evaluate who is ahead. If you are, stop all attacks and just defend. If your opponent is, start a reduction, or an invasion.
Out of frustration, these two principles just vanish into a "play-the-biggest/smartest-move" rush.
I like this. It reminds me of one of my favourite lines in a belgian comic (Spirou et Fantasio), when the heroes come to help a prisoner evade from a military prison in a foreign country :EdLee wrote:One definition (or idea) of courage is not the absence or lack of fear;
rather, it is action in spite of fear.
"Aoh ! I was wondering if they'd find courageous people to come and rescue me !
-Well, they didn't find any, so we came with the jitters !".
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Katoana
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Re: Fear of losing...
This is something that I didn't find in chess: intelligent help when you need it! I'm so grateful that some of you have time to send your own thoughts of this matter. It sure isn't a big problem, but if you don't have anyone to ask help, it could come a oversized hindrance. Thanks!daal wrote:If you know something is true, and act as if it were not, then what you are doing is deluding yourself. By calling it a matter of your personality, you imply that lying to yourself is necessary for your self-definition. I don't think that this is the case. Taking go too seriously is not something that you have to do, it's something you choose to do.
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Re:
Hi EdLee! Maybe the word "fear" was too strong in my first msg. "Discomfort" could have been more precise. But the question would have been the same: why that negative feeling after a lost game is so much stronger than the positive after a won game? It empties the batteries you know...EdLee wrote: Along with the usual suspects: normal 50% win-loss, nothing to fear but fear itself, fear specific to Go or in other aspects of your life, what are your goals in Go, etc. etc.,
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Re: Fear of losing...
I think so too, but I believe that you're so young, that you have more "against" power. There aren't any trophies for me to collect, just the enjoyment of a good game "with" a friend.Abyssinica wrote:Varying degrees of with and against