Capture in overloading is hard for me to spot

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ABC_of_EVERYTHING

I missed lot of intermediate capture. What should i do. 

Both case seem close resemble to the concept of overloading. Or is overloading  the key artillery.You piled up and piled up and at the end you overload

But how to get a feel for it without working hard. On the defending side i get a feel i am overloaded but how to have the same feel of overloaded for my opponent when i am a attacking side

blueemu

Neither of those is an overload.

An overload is when a single piece has been given too many jobs to do, and can't manage them all.

This is an overload:

 

ABC_of_EVERYTHING

I learn about the concept of overloading two days ago. I was sometimes intuitively making those moves but never understand the core of it. That combination is difficult to spot if you awake suddenly after sleep. 

Watch the first match of this video. How carlsen got overloaded at the end executed with the help of the concept of time by his GM opponent. I learn the flow of process and that is I think more important in long time control.

blueemu

That game finished with an overload because the Rook at a8 had too many jobs to do, and could not capture the White Queen while still guarding the back rank against White's Rc8 mate.

The word "overload" has a very specific meaning (too many tasks assigned to one piece), and the two examples you gave in your original post are not "overload"s at all... they are both "pin"s.

ABC_of_EVERYTHING

Little bit of modified position about how I would proceed. 

See I didn't have to use the concept of overloading to checkmate him. I just have to use the concept of time. It's like check, check, mate

blueemu

You did use overload. The Black Queen had to guard three different squares (e7, d8 and f7) and that was one job too many.

The position actually arose this way:

 

Deranged

They're called Zwischenzugs (inbetween moves).

Once you learn to start looking for zwischenzugs, it becomes automatic. You'll do it every time.

blueemu
Deranged wrote:

They're called Zwischenzugs (inbetween moves).

Once you learn to start looking for zwischenzugs, it becomes automatic. You'll do it every time.

A Zwischenzug is something different... it's a surprise move inserted into an opponent's line of play, that disrupts and refutes his intended sequence of moves.

Like this: