Chess is Life

Submitted by kurtgodden on Sun, 11/01/2009 at 8:56pm.

One of Bobby Fischer’s famous utterances is that “Chess is life.” For him that statement may have had a more literal interpretation than for most of us, but metaphorically I do believe that chess is life.  However, life is not a chess game so much as a series of chess games in a long and arduous tournament that begins with little to no knowledge of the game.

Early in life we blunder about, not knowing the proper moves, losing often but learning much until we painfully but surely become more or less competent, if not proficient.  Some never improve beyond this point, forever remaining a patzer.  Most however, do take the time to study life, play a few more moves of it, and study some more.  They discover their weaknesses as well as their strengths, and slowly develop a repertoire of moves that have served them well in the past and which can become the foundation of something deeper and more sophisticated as they progress.

Anyone who has accomplished anything noteworthy, whether in chess or in life, has learned early on that sacrifice is often but a temporary setback.  Lose a pawn, win a piece.  Lose some time, win a contract.  Invest your bishop, gain control of the board.  Invest your kindness, gain a lifelong friend.  Foolish sacrifices are punished quickly, but wise sacrifices lead to victory.

It is the wise person who studies a loss, thereby learning how to avoid it in similar positions in the future.  Did I place my knight on a weak square?  Did I overextend my social life?  How can I make more intelligent choices next time? 

I recently lost a major game in the tournament of life.  If a year is a move, I lost a game in the collapse of the auto industry where I had invested 24 moves of my life.  It was a bitter loss for me.  I loved my teammates, and I was at the height of my ratings category – master level by anyone’s measure.  It was all the more disheartening because I was defeated not through a blunder or even the strength of my opponent, but by events beyond the rules of the game.  A bitter loss indeed, and it led to a personal Zwischenzug that separated me from my family to join a skittles game in the back room until next summer when I hope to be invited to play in another major tournament.

In the meantime, what have I learned from this loss?  Is there anything useful that I can take away from it?  I have learned the value of one’s resources.  As the great Philidor noted long ago, pawns are indeed the soul of chess.  No less so in life itself.  I savor the humble pawns of life more than I did before, remembering that they have an innate capacity to transform into knights, bishops, rooks or queens if properly played.  And just having that knowledge of their latent potential brings me joy and comfort.

The board is now marble, not inlaid wood, and it is just as beautiful as the one that was taken from me in my recent defeat. 

Like a rook, I have traveled to the opposite end of this new board in one brief move, and I have discovered new teammates on that side of the board; teammates who can teach me yet new moves that I can add to my repertoire. 

I can also use this defeat to teach my children the value of an indomitable spirit and what it means not to resign too soon.  They will encounter their own defeats in their life games, and I hope they remember how I reacted to mine.

And let me not fail to mention that I have also been reminded of the immense and precious value of the queen, who is truly the strongest piece on the board.  She wields both immense authority and wise counsel, comforting all in her realm of influence and defending them against the many threats on all sides of the board.

Yes, chess is life and life is chess.  Not a game, but a long tournament of games with setbacks and victories alike.  And as you emerge from your opening and plan your strategy, remember to choose your move carefully, in chess as in life.

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Comments:

by lighthouse - 13 days ago
amsterdam International
Member Since: Sep 2007
Member Points: 233

How did we get in to pushing wood ,

thank you for your , Story ,

this sea called life , so many waves ,

If only i could walk on water ,

by Equilibrium - 16 days ago
Bulgaria
Member Since: Oct 2008
Member Points: 50

Finally someone who shares my and many other peoples' views and who also has the intelligence and knowledge to put ideas into perfect, well - organised, sensible words.

I applaude this article, is there any way you can get it into a paper or something of the sorts, it deserves it.

P.S. can I ask you to write my English homework?

P.P.S Just kidding.

by cunctatorg - 17 days ago
Athens Greece
Member Since: Jun 2008
Member Points: 314

 #4.

 So I tend to believe that there isn't great possibility for comparisons, Victor Korchnoi was actually very ... rich, Bobby Fischer was on the contrary very poor...

 So it's too hard to compare in this ... study case.

by cunctatorg - 17 days ago
Athens Greece
Member Since: Jun 2008
Member Points: 314

 #3

 c) "My father gave serious consideration to my education, and although at home every kopeck had to be counted ... he found it possible to engage a teacher to give me lessons at home in German, at the same time as my first years of learning at school..." This is something of some importance of course but there is much more...

 d) "In the terrible year of 1941, I reached my tenth birthday. Childrens from Leningrad schools were evacuated by the government deep into the country, and my father supported the idea. I set off with my class-mates "on evacuation" as it was then called. I had an unusual journey. Our school was held up somewhere for a long time about 300 kilometres from Leningrad. My mother, whom I used to see occasionally, became alarmed when she learned that we had been held up. On hearing that certain special school trains had been bombed while en route, she came rushing along to save me, and took me back with her. Having lost all our possessions on the way when one of the stations was being bombed, we somehow returned to Leningrad which is where I spent the whole of the war years."

by cunctatorg - 17 days ago
Athens Greece
Member Since: Jun 2008
Member Points: 314

 #2

 Let's examine Victor Korchnoi's both problems and "gracious" opportunities;

 Quotes from his well known (and great) book: "Chess is My Life", Batsford, 1977 Edition.

 a) "...Things weren't easy for me. My mother was a woman of eccentric character, and our family broke up rather quickly. She was very poor, and it soon became impossible for her to feed me and bring me up, and so she handed me over to my father and his household. My mother was a pianist, and had completed a course... All her life her piano was rented. Later, on dozens of occasions, I was to hear from her lips the event that had become the tragedy of her life - she had nothing with which to feed me, and had been forced to give me away..."  Some readers might think that there were some similarities at Bobby's and Victor's early childhood but... 

 b) "My father was a teacher of Russian Language and Literature, and ... There, at the factory, he met a woman who was later to become his wife and my stepmother, and after his death she continued (as she does to this day) to take care of me as if I were her own son." But there is much more...

by cunctatorg - 17 days ago
Athens Greece
Member Since: Jun 2008
Member Points: 314

 #1

"...For Bobby Fisher chess was " life", because chess was the only thing he knew. not like other Great Masters for whom chess was part of their life's..."

 I have to agree in some measure with BishopJoe's opinion but I would like to point out something perhaps much more important than Fischer's "restrictions"...

 One way to understand Fischer's real depth of problems is some comparison with the life's problems and ways of other Great Masters...

by ChessPaladin2009 - 17 days ago
United States
Member Since: Feb 2009
Member Points: 70

SmileThis is where Bobby went wrong - chess is not life, but merely a game - and an excellent game at that!  WinkHe was a phenomenal GrandMaster, but his monomaniacal tendencies shut him out of life!  Sad!  -  ChessPaladin2009Cool  

by BishopJoe - 17 days ago
Israel
Member Since: Mar 2008
Member Points: 152

For Bobby Fisher chess was " life", because chess was the only thing he knew. not like other Great Masters for whom chess was part of their life's.

Yes, I agree with kurtgodden : Life is a chess tournament with many games, some we loss, some we win, and some where we the players get lost for that blunder or a miscalculation.

by DMX21x1 - 17 days ago
Scotland
Member Since: Oct 2009
Member Points: 205

Cool article. The only difference between life and Chess is that Chess has a rigid set of rules which can't be bent or broken. Life only has boundaries which can be stretched.  

by Dozy - 18 days ago
Blue Mountains Australia
Member Since: Aug 2007
Member Points: 2139

First, my congratulations. You've written something that will be linked to, and quoted, and probably plagiarised, well beyond the boundaries of chess.com.

Without minimising the trauma you went through in the twelve months leading up to this piece you've created an allegory that's both wise and thought-provoking. It manages to evoke concern and even sympathy for the several layers of loss that you faced and still maintains an overall optimism that places you firmly among the masters of that Game with few rules.

You asked me recently if I could estimate how long it takes to write a blog post. I couldn't. But I know how long it took to write this one: the whole of a life time.

Many thanks for sharing.

by cunctatorg - 18 days ago
Athens Greece
Member Since: Jun 2008
Member Points: 314

 Obviously a great and inspiring writing.

 I tend to disagree (together with pjm1982) to one point: "... It was all the more disheartening because I was defeated not through a blunder or even the strength of my opponent, but by events beyond the rules of the game..."

 It's very sad to admit but it seems that the real, the actual rules of the game are always there, they aren't an invention, perhaps some temporarily lay dormant  but... Maybe you have to reconsider your understanding of the rules of the game and use some measures, I hate to keep fllowing chess metaphores in such a serious and dramatic issue.

by Bigb7896 - 18 days ago
Garland United States
Member Since: Sep 2009
Member Points: 11

well i do think that chess is an art as you can do nearly anything and almost never get the same result have you ever played a game once b4? (besides fools mate) i think not. however that was a good way to put chess i have been told "chess is the game of life and you ned to sacrifce to get ahead"-will- yet i like the way you put it more

by josephking - 18 days ago
London Great Britain
Member Since: May 2009
Member Points: 2

Another way to view chess is as art. And art is perhaps our way of escaping life. There's no winning or losing in art, just playing.

by VLMJ - 18 days ago
Mililani, Hawaii United States
Member Since: Oct 2008
Member Points: 32

Thank you, kurtgodden, for you wonderful essay.  How very true -- all that you wrote about.

by VLMJ - 18 days ago
Mililani, Hawaii United States
Member Since: Oct 2008
Member Points: 32

In chess and in life, one cannot know everything there is to know or learn everything there is to learn.  But as we grow in the knowledge of life and chess, by experience and by study, we appreciate life better and enjoy chess more.  Kindness, thoughtfulness, courtesy, appreciation, steadfastness, skill, knowledge, courage -- all, and more, interweave  into a wonderful tapestry of life and love.

by pjm1982 - 18 days ago
alberta Canada
Member Since: May 2008
Member Points: 31

great post... sorry for your loss... I wouldn't underestimate the stock market as a weak player... it has gotten a few million people in Zwischenzug... I can hardly tell of any real player who has done that (maybe that was your blunder... you underestimated it since your opening was going well)!!

by namitgaur - 18 days ago
Saint Louis United States
Member Since: Mar 2008
Member Points: 45

good read. chess is indeed life. the way we play chess is the way we lead life. i think.

by Syntax_error - 18 days ago
Nowhere Canada
Member Since: May 2009
Member Points: 94

Written with passion and knowledge, what a fantastic read!

by kunduk - 19 days ago
kolkata India
Member Since: Feb 2009
Member Points: 848

i too agree, as what FISCHER had said..

by NOLAUPT - 19 days ago
New Orleans United States
Member Since: Jun 2009
Member Points: 1079

Good Post

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