This is how I have passed it off. I played lots of games of chess with my siblings. I kept complaining about losing, because I thought I didn't have the experience to play better. But with a lot of lessons about losing every time. These lessons were about hiding, corners, sacrifices. In the hiding one, I can't hide my king most of the game, because it can get himself in check. The corner lesson was, I try not to get my king into a corner, that would get him into check easily. The sacrifice lesson was that the game is about battling, you have to sacrifice your pieces, even though you don't want them to. Another one was No Mercy. I kind of did show too much mercy on any game. One lesson was don't play with one piece, especially the king. If you play with one piece, you'd lose easily. Another lesson was to stay away from walls, because the king can be attacked. Some of these lessons just help me play better at chess.
I
also passed it off by doing a tournament with the family. I kept losing
at each game, but it helped me learn from those mistakes. My
eight-year-old brother, Sport is kind of good at chess, because he
learned much better than I did. The last time I played chess when I was
his age with Mom. I always kept letting Mom win, because I thought it
would be fair if girls won, because their cute. In fact, with me losing
at chess, it kept making my head hurt so much that I couldn't stand
about sacrificing each piece. But even though I kept losing at chess, it
still helps me learn how to play better. Like at Bingham High School,
during lunch time. I played a game of chess with some of my friends.
With the last game before lunchtime was over, I won against one of my
friends. That really did help me become better with all the lessons from
my Mom. Then I passed it off and got the merit badge. Later on, I will
tell all of you how I passed off the other merit badges, just like I
told you about the Chess badge.
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