The Top 10 Benefits of Learning and Playing Chess

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  • The Top 10 Benefits of Learning and Playing Chess

    I recently shared this article on Medium: https://medium.com/i-am-a-writer-for...s-bad29ecbc661

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    The Top 10 Benefits of Learning and Playing Chess

    …And why you should pick up the game of chess


    I don’t recall exactly when and how I picked up the game of chess. But I know it was between the completion of high school and before I went to university.

    I recall frequently visiting a family friend almost every week. And one of the favorite things I did was to play chess with the kids. At the time, I did not have a chess set of my own so it was always exciting to visit this family as it gave me the opportunity to teach the kids and play with them.

    When I started University, I did not realize they had a chess club. One evening, as I was heading to the cafe for dinner, I saw a group of students around a few tables playing and watching chess. I was so excited. I felt like I had suddenly found a precious possession! I got hooked and would spend hours playing and studying chess. The passion for the game was so strong that all I did and thought was chess. It got so strong that it distracted me from my studies and as a result, I failed one of the first-year courses and did poorly in some of the other courses.

    This was a wake-up call that taught me how to balance my hobbies with my academics. After my university days, I stopped playing competitive chess for many years until I recently moved to Oakville, Ontario in 2015. This is when I introduced my kids to chess and we plugged into a chess club in the area. In 2017, I founded Elevate My Chess and a few years later, we started the Oakville Chess Club as a way to stay grounded in our chess community, a community we love and cherish.

    In many ways, I’ve been blessed by the game of chess. Over the last few years, I’ve had the privilege of creating many opportunities for others to learn the game and to play competitively. I have invested both time and money because I know the benefits that chess can provide, not just for the individual player, but for the community as a whole.

    The game of chess is one of the oldest board games and it is loved all over the world. You will often find people gathered in living rooms, pubs, plazas, parks, and libraries to match wits over the cherished chessboard. And you may wonder…

    “Why is it that people are willing to devote such time to the game?”

    Well, there are a number of reasons, but a big one is undoubtedly the fact that chess involves an intense intellectual challenge that’s very good for the health of your mind and particularly good for the development of young kids.

    Here are my top ten benefits of learning and playing the game of chess:


    #1 Chess improves memory

    Good chess players know how to visualize the chessboard. Visualization helps improve your memory. If you know anything about chess, it will not be surprising to learn that expert chess players have strong memory skills. After all, the game involves memorizing numerous combinations of moves and their potential outcomes. This ability to visualize how the pieces will be placed on the board in your head as you analyze various combinations is a hallmark of good chess players.

    In a 2015 study titled “Auditory memory function in expert chess players,” published in the Medical Journal of the Islamic Republic of Iran, researchers compared the recall ability of expert chess players to that of people with no chess-playing experience. They found that the chess players were significantly better at recalling lists of words they’d heard than people who had never played chess. The researchers concluded that increased auditory memory function found in chess players is related to strengthening cognitive performances due to playing chess for a long time.

    Skilled chess players also have a better than average ability to remember and quickly recognize visual patterns, which researchers think comes from memorizing complex chess positions.

    When we teach our beginner class in chess, the first lesson we teach is visualization and pattern recognition. We teach this first because it’s a great foundation for beginner players. When you play chess, your brain will be challenged to exercise logic, develop pattern recognition, make decisions both visually and analytically. And by doing this repeatedly, you test, develop, and improve your memory.


    #2 Chess increases intelligence

    People with a lot of experience playing chess have highly developed thinking abilities in two different areas — fluid intelligence and processing speed.

    Fluid intelligence is the ability to consider new kinds of problems and use reasoning to solve them. While processing speed is the ability to swiftly comprehend tasks and respond efficiently to challenges.

    A 2017 study published in the US National Library of Medicine Catalog showed that both of these forms of intelligence were present in chess masters and in expert musicians. As a result, the study concluded that chess masters and expert musicians appear to be, on average, more intelligent than the general population. And some researchers have also claimed that playing chess or learning music enhances children’s cognitive abilities and academic attainment.


    #3 Chess deepens focus

    With the rise of social media, staying focus is now a very scarce commodity. It’s particularly challenging for children but it’s also an issue that adults have to deal with on a daily basis. Chess enhances your ability to enter into a flow state. Flow is a deeply rewarding sense of total involvement, in which you’re operating at a peak performance level in a challenging task.

    Athletes, artists, and performers often describe entering a kind of time warp, where they are so wholly focused on the task at hand that their awareness of anything beyond the performance seems to disappear. Experienced chess players often experience this level of flow.

    Researchers who study brain activity noted that theta waves are heightened in electroencephalograms (EEGs) taken when people are in a state of flow. Studies have shown the same high levels of theta waves in brain scans of experienced chess players during increasingly difficult chess matches.

    As the famous chess player and former world champion, Bobby Fischer said, “Chess demands total concentration.” This intense focus is useful in everyday life when confronted with school assignments, daily tasks, and deadlines.


    #4 Chess elevates creativity

    One of the reasons I love the game of chess is the opportunity to express yourself creatively. You may have heard the popular saying that a persons’ personality comes out in their chess game.

    Whatever your personality may be, there is room in the game of chess to express it and to do so creatively. A shy and passive person might play more reservedly while an outgoing and social person might be a bold attacker.

    Researchers at a school in India tested the creative thinking skills of two groups of students. One group was trained in chess-playing, and the other was not.

    The tests asked students to come up with alternate uses for common items and to interpret patterns and meaning in abstract forms. Students who played chess scored higher on tests. Researchers concluded that chess increased the students’ ability to exercise divergent and creative thinking.

    In your own personal way, you can show your creativity in the type of moves, plans, and tactics that you come up with on the chessboard.


    #5 Chess boosts planning skills

    Chess games are known for long periods of silent contemplation, during which players consider each move. Players spend time anticipating their opponents’ responses and attempting to predict every eventuality. Without the ability to plan, you cannot be a good chess player.

    In a 2006 publication in the National Library of Medicine titled, “Planning abilities and chess: a comparison of chess and non-chess players on the Tower of London task”, researchers gave two groups of people a cognitive functioning test involving pegs and beads and measured their planning skills. The group that regularly played chess demonstrated significantly better planning skills than the group that did not play chess.

    That habit of mind — careful contemplation and planning — is one of the cognitive health benefits of playing chess.


    #6 Chess protects against dementia

    There is so much research that suggests that chess offers great protection against dementia. In a 2019 research review, scientists found that the complex mental flexibility chess demands could help protect older people from dementia.

    Researchers found evidence that the game, which challenges memory, calculation, visual-spatial skills, and critical thinking abilities, may help reduce cognitive decline and postpone the effects of dementia as you age.


    ...read the rest of the article on Medium using this link: https://medium.com/i-am-a-writer-for...s-bad29ecbc661


    I hope you’ve found some value in this and I hope you now see why you should consider picking up the game of chess. There is strong research that supports many educational, life, and health benefits associated with the game of chess. If you’re curious to learn more about the game, get in touch with us as we provide many opportunities for you to do so, including training for new beginners. And if you’re looking for a better way to spend the rest of your Summer, consider joining our 7-Day Virtual Chess Festival starting soon.


  • #2
    Extremely interesting, well thought out and well written. Chess is a great game, that is why we love it so much. It exhalts and it humbles. Golf is very similar.


    You write, "Athletes, artists, and performers often describe entering a kind of time warp, where they are so wholly focused on the task at hand that their awareness of anything beyond the performance seems to disappear. Experienced chess players often experience this level of flow." I can neither speak to athleticism nor to chess on this subject, but I can speak to the playing of music. When you are at your best your focus is absolutely pure and you are taken away by the activity. You become a passive observer at times, simply watching what is happening to your body and mind in the production of the music which seems to be spontaneously generated by the highest power in existence. Then someone sings a note out of tune, a sort of blunder, and you crash back down into a more common state of normality. I presume chess is the same way at the highest levels. As is golf.

    Comment


    • #3
      Gentlemen, wonderful posts!

      Comment


      • #4
        I thought the top-2 would be along the lines of:

        1. Chess improves blood flow to the brain
        When we realize us old farts are getting crushed by 8 year-olds in openings we have played for decades, the resulting frustration/anger increases blood flow to the brain.

        2. Chess keeps us humble.
        When we realize us old farts are getting crushed by 8 year-olds in openings we have played for decades, we realize that our time is passing and so, we try to simply enjoy the game rather than winning being the main goal.

        Comment


        • #5
          I like it Sam. Maybe we should start a list for 50 +.

          Comment


          • #6
            Chess makes it fun to think.

            Comment


            • #7
              Chess is the only "sport" with a no smoking rule, I think

              Comment


              • #8
                Originally posted by Michael Yip View Post
                Chess is the only "sport" with a no smoking rule, I think
                World Series of Poker has been non smoking for years and years

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