Yes^
I'm going for a world record.

I'm really going for a world record, I want to be the most obssessed chess player since Bobby Fischer. I hate real life so that shouldn't get in my way. I plan on playing and studying chess every waking minute. Chess is all I talk about I don't waste my time talking about anything that is not chess related.
I just found something out, Bobby Fischer didn't play chess after he won the world championship. Any chess extremist would play until they die. Maybe Bobby's record can be broken because I intend to play until I die.
I'm probably a little hypocritical, myself -- But, given your publicly announced obsession, with 'chess'..{for myself 'posting' recently overtook my love of chess} .. You need not answer.. But, would that make, 'God' and 'prayer'.. numbers, 2 and 3 ?!
Bobby Fischer played a lot in the Phillipines and elsewhere after he won the world championship? That's news to me. I just wish he would have defended his title that's more what a chess extremist would do.
I'm sure the 'details' can be 'Web' searched/ googled; But, as you may recall - 'Fischer's 'conditions' of most, any Major chess match, and several *'tourneys - Came, 'Numero Uno'!..{# 1}. 0:
..* On more than 1 occassion .. Playing on the 'Sabbath' {Saturday}.. was a proverbial 'deal breaker'!
I wish I had the raw talent that Bobby Fischer had but I don't. I must work extremely hard just to make it to master level.
Hey! .. Maybe you could become a 'paid' "grilled chess sandwich" tutor! [ ;
Chess For Progress: How A Grandmaster Is Using The Game To Teach Life Skills

Maurice Ashley, a chess grandmaster and the first African-American to hold that title, talks with his son, Jayden.
A few "short" years ago, during my sophomore year at The City College of New York, some fellow Caribbean classmates told me that the education department was offering a "free" course, called Thinking Chess, for three credits.
As an international student from Barbados, paying almost four times more in tuition than locals, the idea of getting "free" credits in a system where we had to pay for everything was nothing short of a miracle. I jumped at the idea of taking the class because, after all, who doesn't want to save a few dollars living in a foreign country away from one's family?
More than that, I'd always wanted to learn chess. And, as if I weren't psyched enough about free credits, the kicker sold me — the class was going to be taught by an international grandmaster. I may have been a novice at chess, but I sure knew that a grandmaster meant I would be learning from one of the game's best. Details about our instructor-to-be got even more exciting. Not only was he a grandmaster, but he was the first African-American and Jamaican-born grandmaster in chess — a designation that brought me immense pride as a West Indian.
I have had students come up to me later as grown adults to tell me about how chess has helped to transform their lives with their ability to think more critically, to process data more rapidly and to make better decisions.
His name is Maurice Ashley. It was my first time hearing about him, but I could hardly wait to meet him and learn the game that brought him fame — and of course, earn those free easy credits. Ashley was amiable and smart, a proud alum returning to his alma mater to teach, and this assignment was no game for him; he meant business.
In his introduction, he told us that ours was an addition to the many classes he'd been teaching throughout New York City since 1988 to students ages 5 to 18. His lessons, he noted, were not simply to instruct students on how to play chess, but how to apply its tactics and strategies to life.
Ashley made it clear that our credits would be hard-earned, and in order to pass the class, among other criteria, we had to (1) attempt to checkmate him in a limited number of moves and (2) write a paper on how we plan to apply the tactics and strategies of chess to our respective chosen professions and, ultimately, our lives.
All of a sudden, what I thought would be three easy credits seemed as daunting as the chances of my actually becoming a grandmaster.

Maurice Ashley ponders a move while playing 30 children in a chess match at the U.S. Chess Center in Washington, D.C.
I didn't checkmate Ashley in my practical chess exam, but I got an A in that course and learned life lessons that have served me well beyond the classroom.
These nuggets came to mind last week when Ashley made headlines. As the U.S. Chess Championships got underway, he received one of the highest honors bestowed to an American chess grandmaster — induction into the U.S. Chess Hall of Fame in St. Louis.
The occasion caused me to reflect on his journey from Jamaica to the world stage and how for almost 30 years he has influenced the lives of countless students — mine included — through teaching chess.
Thinking Chess With Maurice Ashley
I found my old college essay from the chess course I took with Ashley and I reached out to him for an interview. On revisiting my essay, I smiled at how my takeaway from that class was in sync with what he told me this past week.
In part, my essay said:
"My most profound lesson from learning the strategies and tactics of chess is the cognizance of the consequence of my actions. ... I learned that similar to finding every possible convergent square on the chess board, to think through all available options I have when faced with a problem or decision and to consider what may be the result of my actions."
And when I asked Ashley recently what he most wants to teach when instructing students on the game, his answer reiterated what I'd learned: "The absolute most important skill that you learn when you play chess is how to make good decisions. On every single move you have to analyze a situation, process what your opponent is doing and evaluate the best move from amongst all your options."
Ashley says he finds great gratification in reconnecting with students.
"I have had students come up to me later as grown adults to tell me about how chess has helped to transform their lives with their ability to think more critically, to process data more rapidly and to make better decisions," he says.
Taking Ashley back down memory lane, I asked him what he'd accomplished from teaching my class (whose students were mostly education majors).
"The class allowed me to teach the principles behind chess and important critical thinking skills that students develop when they play the game," he says. "It was my goal to infect teachers with a love for the game and the belief that they themselves could teach chess in an actual classroom."
Taking Chess To Ferguson
Most of Ashley's teaching engagements over the years have been through the Chess in the Schools program in New York City and the Harlem Educational Activities Fund. These days, he has also partnered with the Chess Club and Scholastic Center of St. Louis to bring chess to places like Ferguson, Mo.
Maurice Ashley (right) shakes the hand of a student after defeating him in a friendly match at Walnut Grove Elementary School in Ferguson, Mo.
"It always warms my heart to be able to teach kids in the five boroughs of New York City, but also to be able to impact young people nationwide," he says.
Several of Ashley's students have participated in national competitions, and three teams — including the Raging Rooks and the Dark Knights — have won national championships. While he's proud of students who become great chess players, he insists his motivation is not to create grandmasters.
"I've had students who have gone onto Harvard, NYU, Yale, the University of Michigan and many other top universities because they've taken those skills from chess that have allowed them to apply [them] to academics and to life. That's really what's critical for me, that they are learning to be better students, role models and citizens."
From Jamaica To The Chess Hall Of Fame
Ashley, 50, was 12 years old when he emigrated from Jamaica to New York City with his mother. He grew up on the tough streets of Brooklyn, and during his teenage years at Brooklyn Technical High School, he honed his chess playing skills in the city's parks and chess clubs.
"Sometimes I didn't feel as though the world could hear my voice or that people really cared," he says. "But I found that with hard work and especially with pursuing your passion, you can grow in ways that you could never have imagined."
Ashley got his first big title in 1992 when he shared the U.S. Game/10 chess championship with Maxim Dlugy. In 1999, he created history by becoming not only the first African-American international grandmaster, but also the first Jamaican-born.
He's won several other accolades for various roles in chess, but says his April 13 induction into the U.S. Chess Hall of Fame has been like a "fairy tale ride." He says he never thought that one day his name and face would be mounted on a wall with the greatest chess players of all time. In fact, he doesn't even fancy himself a great chess player.
"A grandmaster, yes, but I am not among the all-time top players," he says. "So I'm humbled because this is recognition of not only some of my accomplishments as a player, but primarily for my accomplishments as a promoter and as an ambassador of the sport."
He adds, "It means that everything that I've put into this game that I love, the blood, sweat and tears, the hard work, and the suffering through the lean times have been recognized as meaningful to others."
Inspiring Others Through Chess Success
Ashley sees his accomplishments as a way of inspiring others, particularly those who come from similar beginnings. And he's encouraging everyone to follow their dreams, no matter how nontraditional. His focus, however, remains on teaching.
"Everyone should introduce their children to the game of chess," he says. "It's an inexpensive way of teaching your children lifelong skills that they will use for the rest of their lives."
I can testify to that. Ten years after my chess class with Maurice Ashley, I'm still putting to use the lessons he taught me. These sentiments, in another excerpt from my Thinking Chess essay, rings true today in my role as a journalist:
"The most pertinent strategy from chess that I can immediately apply to my profession is the concept of loyalty that surrounds protecting/securing the king. ... One must utilize the full army of pawns, bishops, knights, rooks and the powerful queen to destroy enemies and safeguard the mighty king. As a journalist, my immediate loyalties are to the company for which I work, my sources, my contemporaries, the ethics of my profession and myself in upholding integrity."
Pictured, on the 'right' {see below} - Is the author {& former "Maurice Ashley" chess student} - Of the preceding 'pasted' article, which I'd recently posted. 0:
In search of the Christian Remnant

Maquita Peters with Pastor Alex Awad at the East Jerusalem Baptist Church. Photo provided by Maquita Peters.
By Maquita Peters
JERUSALEM — A myriad of memories are etched in my mind as I reluctantly prepare to leave the Holy Land. Tough as it is to highlight just one moment that moved me over these 10 days, here’s my attempt. Like for many other religious people, and in my case a born-again Christian, it has always been a dream to visit the birthplace of my faith. But I never thought that day would come.
We’ve been preparing for this trip ever since the semester began in late January. From the very start we began to think about a feature story we’d like to cover on the trip. I began thinking about how I could tell the story of the decreasing Christian presence in the Holy Land. I wondered if I would even be able to find a group of devoted local Christians that I could join in worship or prayer.
Upon our arrival in Israel, I became totally disheartened as the reality of this Christian exodus really hit me. I knew that it was going to be challenging to find a strong Christian presence here and, for the first time in my life, I felt like Christians were an endangered species.
One morning I set out for the Bethlehem Bible College to interview the Rev. Alex Awad, the school’s dean of students and an evangelical pastor. I arrived half an hour before our scheduled 8:30 appointment and heard some sweet sounding gospel music coming from an upper room. I was told it was the sound of the 30-minute daily devotions and was invited to join. As I climbed the stairs, I added my voice to the familiar chorus, “We Bring Sacrifices of Praise.” I was still singing when I got to the doorway of the devotion room. Everyone looked up when I entered. Looking at a room of about 20 people – Arab Christians and White Europeans – sitting in a circle of chairs, I worried that — as a black woman with dreadlocks — I wouldn’t fit in. I paused and was about to turn away, when almost everyone said, “Welcome!”
The woman sitting closest to the door said, “come in” and rose and offered me her chair. The keyboard player in the corner at the back of the room struck up a chord and the singing resumed – this time in Arabic. Given that my Arabic is limited to “shukran” (thank you) I had no clue what was being sung. But the singing was beautiful and despite being amidst a group of strangers, I felt at home. When the music ended, I was asked to introduce myself. I told them I was a journalism student from Columbia University in New York in search of the remnant of Christians in the Holy Land and that I was very happy to find them, after which I was given a rousing round of applause.
We then read from the Gospel according to Mark chapter 1:35 which states, “And in the morning, a great while before day, he rose up and went out, and departed into a desert place, and there prayed.”
This verse speaks to Jesus beginning His day with prayer and meditation – an example set for many of His followers and demonstrated by those in the devotion room at the Bible college. Then the Rev. Palmer Becker, a consulting Mennonite minister, gave a 10-minute exhortation on the importance of prayer. As he spoke, Dr. Bishara Awad, president of the Bible college and brother of the man I was supposed to see, interpreted in Arabic. Palmer said Christians should follow in Jesus’ footsteps and pray every day.
“We pray to give God glory; to thank Him for who He is and what he does. We pray for God’s will,” Palmer said.
He said prayer is effective in our relationships with family, friends and professional colleagues, but more importantly it brings Christians closer to God.
“A relationship with God is basic to any religion,” Palmer said. “If there’s no prayer, there’s no Judaism, no Islam, no religion. Prayer brings us to a right relationship with God.”
On this note, Palmer asked everyone in the room for their special prayer requests and prayed for all of us before ending devotions. I later learned that Palmer was a visiting instructor from MennoniteChurch Eastern Canada who’d been at the college for the past two months. This daily devotion has long been a tradition at the 32-year-old inter-denominational Bible college, which trains young local Christians to become leaders in their churches. Students earn certificates, Bachelors and Masters degrees here. By educating these members of the community, Dr. Awad said he’s able to encourage many Christians to stay and serve within the Holy Land and not contribute to the “exodus.”
I checked the time and it was exactly 8:30. With renewed optimism about the preservation of Christianity in the Holy Land, I descended the stairs to interview his brother Alex Awad, who too gave much hope that though few in numbers, Christians remain a committed force in Israel.
For more, please stay tuned for Maquita’s upcoming feature on Christians in the Holy Land.
Proto-type design, for an 'Obsessive's 3-way light switch. 1. obsessive, 2. Totally obsessed - 3. uninterested, or 'off'
Speaking of Diverse 'records' - "A 'half-marathon' is just a '5k' race - With a 10 mile 'warm-up' " 0: ..{borrowed off-the-Web!}
I've since lost track! .. Who's going, for a 'World record'? .. And, in what 'pray-tell'.. endeavor or sport?! ..lol
http://www.pdc.tv/world-darts-championship

I'm really going for a world record, I want to be the most obssessed chess player since Bobby Fischer. I hate real life so that shouldn't get in my way. I plan on playing and studying chess every waking minute. Chess is all I talk about I don't waste my time talking about anything that is not chess related.
I would suggest hooking up with:
bettoroffsingle
ALIVE...aka alot of names
This 'world record' themed topic - Must've 'hit' some inquisitive-research, 'posting' Nerve, in my psyche!? ..{not sure why - perhaps a concept, related to 'Excellence'!? - coming up next: the " 'Green Bay' Packers"! .. just joking}.
The Most Successful Franchise In Professional Sports History
{from: nba.com/boston celtics/history}
Quite simply, the Boston Celtics are "the Franchise," Celtics Green is "the Color," and the winking leprechaun that serves as the team's logo symbolizes five decades of NBA tradition. A charter member of the Basketball Association of America (which evolved into the NBA), Boston flies more title banners from the rafters of its home arena than any other franchise.
Although the Celtics have known some tough years, no other professional sports franchise can match the team for its record of success. Certainly no other team has ever dominated a league the way Boston did from 1957 to 1969, when the club won 11 NBA Championships. For those 13 years, the team was "the Dynasty." {fini}
I'm really going for a world record, I want to be the most obssessed chess player since Bobby Fischer. I hate real life so that shouldn't get in my way. I plan on playing and studying chess every waking minute. Chess is all I talk about I don't waste my time talking about anything that is not chess related.