Psych approach to ladder anxiety - Page 7
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xZiGGY
United Kingdom801 Posts
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Suikakuju
Germany237 Posts
Also great read but for fighting games -.- I think both apply´s http://shoryuken.com/2011/11/29/six-psychological-tips-to-help-you-level-up-your-game-faster-part-1/ | ||
Champi
1422 Posts
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Lobo2me
Norway1213 Posts
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Tanag
Canada204 Posts
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Dude.
United States94 Posts
Thank you so much for taking the time and effort to write this. =D (BME student here) | ||
blumberry
2 Posts
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Fiendish
United States210 Posts
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MingusDew
United States77 Posts
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Diks
Belgium1880 Posts
Thank you. | ||
brxnd0n
United States42 Posts
great read. | ||
Chamby
United States32 Posts
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Shallot
United States58 Posts
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strongandbig
United States4858 Posts
When I played a lot, I definitely experienced some of the things OP described. Not the adrenaline so much, but more the difficulty separating current skill and future skill, and separating my self skill appraisal from overall ego value. I still forced myself to play through it, and it did get better. Actually practicing and improving my skill helped a lot, since I got positive feedback as I advanced in leagues. Once I plateaued at high-ish diamond, I still could play ladder games without too much anxiety since I knew that my "current skill" was higher than it had been in the past as the result of my own efforts. However, when I was home for summer break I couldn't play due to a slow Internet connection. Since then, I've been having troubles with anxiety because all that positive feedback has become negative; my "current skill" is lower than it has been, and thus I lose to players and strategies that I "should beat." Hopefully some of the things in the OP here will help me get back into it. @OP: are you finishing undergrad, or a phd or master's? This is more in depth into the therapy/coping side of things than I would expect undergrad psych classes to go, but I can't imagine someone finishing a grad degree would have enough time to put together something so detailed and long. One last thing: I love your suggestion that players who can ignore balance issues will be happier than those who think about them, blame their losses on them, or complain about them. Case in point: the happiest person in Starcraft, Day[9]. | ||
awwnuts07
United States621 Posts
Personally. I don't ladder a whole lot because I have the opposite problem: "ladder addiction". I purposefully play no more than 3-5 games a day/every other day because I'm afraid I won't stop. Starcraft is too much like Pringles. | ||
Utinni
Canada1196 Posts
On December 28 2011 03:50 awwnuts07 wrote: Great read. Hopefully, this will help those who have a hard time pressing that "find match" button. Personally. I don't ladder a whole lot because I have the opposite problem: "ladder addiction". I purposefully play no more than 3-5 games a day/every other day because I'm afraid I won't stop. Starcraft is too much like Pringles. I guess that is good if you don't want to improve too much. | ||
Dingodile
4131 Posts
I played Season 1 and 2, then i switched to co-op. I was silver in both seasons, i won around 20 of 30 matches ( i lost all zvz if i remember correctly). I think, my biggest anxiety is that I get stronger opponent later, even if I play better from match to match. I have no ladder or online experience in a other rts game. After I read your post, i feel much better. I probably play ladder again Sorry for my bad english, i know my english isn`t good/okay. | ||
Nolari
Netherlands51 Posts
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LilClinkin
Australia667 Posts
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Catatonic
United States699 Posts
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