Patience
Learning to wait for the right moment instead of reacting to the first impulse.
Using the chessboard as a hands-on classroom for patience, decision-making, emotional control, and resilience — nonclinical youth development that meets young people where they already love to compete, think, and create. Available across Washington State and virtually.
This is not about producing tournament champions. It is about the thinking habits the game builds — and how they carry into school, relationships, and tough decisions.
Some young people tune out a lecture but lean all the way into a game. Chess gives them a place to practice patience, consequences, and emotional control where the stakes feel real but safe — one move at a time. Charell teaches the game properly, but the goal is always the person, not the rating.
Sessions start wherever the young person is, whether they have never touched a piece or already play. Support is offered one-on-one or in small groups, in person across Washington or virtually.
Learning to wait for the right moment instead of reacting to the first impulse.
Every move has a result. Youth see cause and effect play out in real time.
Thinking two or three moves before acting, then carrying that habit off the board.
Staying steady after a setback, a blunder, or a loss — without shutting down.
Weighing options and trade-offs instead of guessing.
Losing a game, learning from it, and coming back to play again.
Pausing to consider options before deciding — a skill that transfers everywhere.
Like the pawn that reaches the other side of the board, small steps add up to real change.
Like the pawn, a young person can be underestimated — patient, humble, and capable of transformation once they reach the other side of the board.
For youth who engage best through screens, chess-based skills can also be delivered digitally — see VR & Technology-Assisted Engagement.