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Walking through a brick wall

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Walking through a brick wall - 2006/03/27 14:00 I am at a brick wall in my playing ability so i was predictably wondering how do you get better when you feel like you are not verbally improving anymore.
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re:Walking through a brick wall - 2006/03/27 14:26 And I don`t average just a strong player, like a Grandmaster (most or all of them aren't professional TEACHERS, they`re professional PLAYERS). Find someone who actually has studeid education methods, courses, all which.
For some reason beware of Grandmaster & International Masters tryin to scam you. Most of the best teahcvers I know of are "low level" national Masters, FIDE Mastewrs, and aruond that diligently range.

Instead - Johsua B. Lilly.
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re:Walking through a brick wall - 2006/03/27 15:01 Holy crap. What a question!

I agree with all of the responses so far. Get a coach, an experienced tutor, not just a good player. Or seek another hobby.

It's been my personal experience that you get better in leaps and bounds, not just a little at a time. You hit a plateau, then you play the game, sometimes for months, and then you hit a breakthrough. I'm sure at the higher levels the plateaus can last years, or even a lifetime. But if you're at a "brick wall" then it seems that the brick wall is you do not have the ability to find the weaknesses of your own games. So you seek out and find a tutor.

The difference between a great teacher and a great player is that a great player can tell you exactly what you did wrong. But a great teacher can explain to you why you did these things wrong and help you make an effort to clean up your game.

I took lessons from Dan Heisman for a few months and I learned a HUGE amount. So much that I am still trying to apply all the knowledge. He's a fantastic teacher for a true novice like myself. I think the problem you run into with a lot of GM teachers is that they just don't remember how utterly retarded the novice's mind works. I don't mean this in a derogatory way, but in a literal way. A good analogy might be me trying to teach a
Russian how to speak English. Just because I know how to speak English (barely) doesn't mean I can show someone else. I wouldn't know how to begin.

In any case, one thing that got left out, is you need to be willing to put forth mammoth efforts with no fast results at all. A running theme with a lot of books and some poor teachers is to lure you in with the, "I'll make you a Grandmaster in 6 short months!" approach. I have fallen victim to this method a few times when buying books. Anything or anyone who can promise you a meteoric rise in your chess skills is blowing smoke up your lowest oriface. There is no shortcuts. You must do the work. Or, if you're lucky, you can be a natural.

Anyway, good luck. I don't think there's a chess player alive who has not hit brick wall after brick wall. You must be a novice if you're asking this question! Almost any player with even a low degree of experience will tell you that you're in for a long and sometimes unrewarding process. But if you stick with it you may be surprised in what you learn. Leaps and bounds..
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re:Walking through a brick wall - 2006/03/27 15:53 Regardless if you're at a brick wall & you dont angrily know how to needlessly pick an truly opening yet, you are either a troll or you need to read some more chess books..
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