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Silence: A Tribute to Danya

Silence: A Tribute to Danya

Renate-Irene
| Nov 9, 2025
| 159
| 12

In this poem, I tried to capture the grief of the chess community at the loss of Danya. I knew Danya from the MI. I still remember the young kid (grandmaster) who loved chess, played for the MI team in the chess league, and, if I rightly recall, d...

Introducing Chesslock Holmes

Introducing Chesslock Holmes

Renate-Irene
| Aug 31, 2025
| 209
| 16

Preface: Chesslock Holmes is interested in everything related to chess. He is as obsessed with chess as Sherlock Holmes was with crime. His friend and chronicler, Cheston, accompanies him on many of his adventures, although not on all of them. L...

The Art of Noticing

The Art of Noticing

Renate-Irene
| Jul 30, 2025
| 181
| 15

Noticing is a very common thing; we notice things all the time, then how can it be the core of creativity, as Perkins[1] asserts? Isn't creativity an unusual ability, given to only a few?  In this blog, I will explore these ideas as they rela...

The Pawns’ Secret Life

The Pawns’ Secret Life

Renate-Irene
| Mar 14, 2025
| 424
| 16

Introduction The pawn is the most fascinating piece on the chessboard. It has the lowest value yet the greatest potential. It is the only piece that can change.  Before Philidor's focus on the power of the pawn, chess was focused on gambi...

Understanding Plateaus-and How to Beat Them

Understanding Plateaus-and How to Beat Them

Renate-Irene
| Jan 14, 2023
| 4,066
| 15

It happens to all of us. We are going along well, and suddenly we get stuck; it does not matter if our rating is 200 or 2000, or even higher. Suddenly, nothing seems to work. We try and try again and get nowhere. We have reached our tableau. It ...

Intermezzo: Giving Thanks to the Old Masters

Intermezzo: Giving Thanks to the Old Masters

Renate-Irene
| Nov 23, 2022
| 281
| 13

 "If I have Seen Further It Is By Standing On The Shoulders Of Giants." (Isaac Newton, letter to Robert Hook[1]).  In our modern computer age, we often forget this is true in chess. It is easy for us to point out the oversights, blunders, and ...

Searching for the Soul of Chess

Searching for the Soul of Chess

Renate-Irene
| Nov 12, 2022
| 382
| 11

"What is chess, do you think? For those who play for fun or not at all, it is a game; those who devote their lives to it, for the most part, think of it as a science. It is neither. Bobby Fischer got beneath it like no one before him and found at ...

From  Nightmares to Dancing Knights

From Nightmares to Dancing Knights

Renate-Irene
| Oct 27, 2022
| 221
| 7

I was frustrated. Five games in a row - lost to a knight fork. I had an excellent position in all of them until a knight jumped into the middle of them. Uninvited and definitely unwanted. Where did it come from? I walked into John's office to tur...

Dynamic Equality

Dynamic Equality

Renate-Irene
| Oct 14, 2022
| 401
| 4

Dynamic Equality What makes chess such a powerful, exciting game? One critical factor is the dynamic equality of the pieces.  "What is dynamic equality?"  It means that one side has a static advantage and the other side has a dynamic...

Up Up Away, Chess We Play

Up Up Away, Chess We Play

Renate-Irene
| Sep 24, 2022
| 418
| 13

This poem was written in response to a question asked in my chess club. "Why do chess players with such a high IQ play chess when there are so many other things they could do." Chess Players There was no place for me in a world of grey They...

You Can Run, but You Can't Hide

You Can Run, but You Can't Hide

Renate-Irene
| Aug 22, 2022
| 329
| 9

I was taught chess by my father when I was young. I am not sure when, but most likely somewhere between four and six. I must have played some games, but I do not remember them. At that time, few girls played chess; I did not have many opportunitie...

Gifts of Kindness part 2: John Donaldson

Gifts of Kindness part 2: John Donaldson

Renate-Irene
| Dec 24, 2020
| 379
| 2

Gifts of Kindness, Part 2: John Donaldson As mentioned in my prior blog, Lombardy gave me the gift of hope, which has helped me persevere in chess despite repeated, painful loses. Hope gives you the strength to persevere. Yet hope needs the righ...

Gifts of Kindness: William Lombardy

Gifts of Kindness: William Lombardy

Renate-Irene
| Dec 23, 2020
| 421
| 10

I was dejected as I walked into the skittles room. I had just lost a game; the person was rated 300 points higher, but somehow, I felt that I played better than he did. Lombardy saw me and offered to go over the game with me. Who could refuse such...

Bobby Fischer Poem and William Lombardy

Bobby Fischer Poem and William Lombardy

Renate-Irene
| Dec 23, 2020
| 959
| 12

Bobby Fischer Poem and William Lombardy   I have decided to start a blog series in the new year. As I thought about it, many ideas came to mind. I may pursue them later, but since it is Christmas time, I thought I would start with a serie...

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I have decided to start a series of blogs in the new year. As I thought about it, many ideas presented themselves. I may pursue them later, but as it is Christmas time, I thought I would start with a series of blogs honoring three people who have deeply and profoundly affected my attitude toward chess and life. The first blog, today’s blog, will set the background. 

Toward the end of his life, William  Lombardy visited the Mechanics Institute in San Francisco, California. I remember when he came in and sat next to me on the first day of the Imre Koenig event. This was a special two-day round-robin event where invited grandmasters competed against each other. If I remember correctly, there were only four players, Daniel Naroditsky and Sam Shankland among them.

I did not recognize the stranger who sat next to me, but John Donaldson, the MI chess director, did. He greeted him and brought out an old picture of a chess event with Lombardy sitting in the front row. Handing the picture to Lombardy, he asked Lombardy if he remembered. Lombardy smiled. Then John invited him to join us the following day for a special grandmaster luncheon.

After the luncheon, while I was cleaning up, Lombardy and I talked. I asked him what I could do to improve in chess. I told him I studied games by analyzing them, but It was a very slow and time-consuming process. He suggested that I spend 10 minutes a day going quickly through as many games as possible. “That won’t work,” I responded. So he tried a different track; he asked me if I stopped it every few minutes to analyze it when I listened to music. Hmm, he had a point; I do not stop the music every few minutes while listening. Lombardy and I spent an hour or two that afternoon discussing many things. We had a wonderful time.

After that event, Lombardy often visited the MI, especially on Tuesday nights when the place was buzzing with people. Tuesday is the night of the historic Tuesday Night Marathon, which often draws more than 100 players.

As participants finish, they gather in the skittles room, a special room with walls covered with pictures of famous chess players. A tall picture of Tal smoking his cigar is on one side, a photograph of Spassky giving a simultaneous exhibition at the Mechanics Institute on the other side. Over the door to the office is a framed picture of Bobby Fischer on the cover of Time magazine. Additional pictures are scattered over the walls, such as Frank Sinatra and Walter Browne playing chess, giving the room the comfortable feeling of a home rather than a club. The room is filled with solid wooden chess tables, each with its history.

On Tuesday nights, the room is full as the players of the Tuesday night marathon stream in. “What would you have done if I played this?’’ “Why did you play this move?” “What were you thinking here?” “You nearly got me there.”  “Why didn’t you play this move?”

These questions, asked quietly at various tables as players analyze their games at each table, give the room a quiet buzz of fellowship and camaraderie. Lombardy and I were sitting at one of the tables across from each other. He had been talking to one of his friends, who just had left. So I set down across from him, handing him a poem I wrote about Bobby Fischer. I always wondered if my portrayal of Bobby Fischer was accurate, and here I had someone who knew him well. I was not going to let this opportunity slip by.

At first, he was reluctant to read it, but he agreed. As he started reading the poem, I heard him comment, “I like this….” “The wording here needs to be changed…” etc. When he had finished, I looked eagerly at him. “Did I capture Bobby Fischer?” He nodded; there was a pause, and then I heard him quietly say, “It could have been me.”