Its about time I got serious!
Posted: Sun Sep 11, 2011 7:33 pm
Hi everyone!
My name is Darren, and I've been trying to get into go for god knows how long now, the problem being I read a few books, do problems etc for while every day, then when I go to play actual games (so far against the computer), I tend to lose and get a sinking feeling that all the things I have been learning haven't really stuck that well at all. Because of this I got burnt out and stopped a few times.
This cycle repeated on and off for a few years with the occasional urge to try again for a few weeks with the same result
By now I've covered the Learn to Play Go books (1-3), Go for Beginners, Basic Techniques of Go, Graded Go Problems (1-2) and one or two others, and I'm searching for more that cover the fundamentals just so they can be drilled in as many different ways as possible (If anybody has any they recommend let me know!). I've tried a few things that have a steep learning curve and stuck with it, but the fact go has eluded me seems to make me want to learn it more
So this time I'm taking some extra steps to get over that first hurdle by signing up here and getting an account on KGS! Hopefully by actually playing other players and getting advice from around here I can finally get my go progression moving at a good speed.
Apart from that, I'm just about to move to Tokyo for work after graduating a Japanese degree this summer, so with a bit of luck I can find some clubs/a lot better access to books to keep me going! For interests I'm currently really into contact juggling (for anyone interested there are videos in my sig) and that takes up most of my time when I'm not studying Japanese.
Anyway, sorry for the long post, Hopefully I'll be around for good this time!
My name is Darren, and I've been trying to get into go for god knows how long now, the problem being I read a few books, do problems etc for while every day, then when I go to play actual games (so far against the computer), I tend to lose and get a sinking feeling that all the things I have been learning haven't really stuck that well at all. Because of this I got burnt out and stopped a few times.
This cycle repeated on and off for a few years with the occasional urge to try again for a few weeks with the same result
Apart from that, I'm just about to move to Tokyo for work after graduating a Japanese degree this summer, so with a bit of luck I can find some clubs/a lot better access to books to keep me going! For interests I'm currently really into contact juggling (for anyone interested there are videos in my sig) and that takes up most of my time when I'm not studying Japanese.
Anyway, sorry for the long post, Hopefully I'll be around for good this time!