Welcome to Private Lesson Lite with Zee
You have joined the Lite program. You get one focused lesson each month built around your own games, a teaching game, and a clear plan so that, even with a lighter schedule, you keep moving forward with purpose.
What the Lite program includes
One lesson each month
A single private session every month, usually 60 to 120 minutes, long enough to review your games and play a teaching game without rushing.
Reviews of your own games
Each lesson includes a live review of one or more of your recent games, focusing on the positions that actually decided the result.
Teaching game and review
We play a teaching game without handicap that targets your typical opening and early middle game patterns, then review it together in the same session.
Study plan and support
After each lesson, you receive a focused study plan for the month, and you can still ask questions when you are completely stuck on a position or idea.
First steps
1. Set up contact
Please make sure we are connected through at least one channel:
- Discord: zee7921
- Email: zeejyan@gmail.com
When you message for the first time, include your main Go server, rank, time zone, and general availability. That gives us a clear starting point.
2. Schedule your monthly lesson
We will set a time for your next lesson that fits your schedule. Some students prefer a fixed day each month. Others arrange the next date after each session. Either approach is fine, as long as you can show up with energy and focus.
3. Send a game before each lesson
Before every lesson, please send at least one recent game. More is fine if you are not sure which one to choose.
- Games against players around your level are ideal.
- Send an SGF file or a server link from OGS, Fox, Tygem, and similar sites.
- Use Discord or email, whichever you prefer.
A game that felt confusing, tense, or frustrating is often the most useful. If you are unsure which game to send, send two and I will pick one to focus on first.
Inside a typical Lite lesson
1. Review of your games
We begin with your game or games. You describe what you were thinking at key moves. I show where the plan, direction, or move choice should change, and how that change would have influenced the result.
2. Focused teaching game
We then play a teaching game without handicap. The goal is to reach positions that reveal your habits in the opening and early middle game. We are not trying to produce a perfect game, but to expose patterns that we can improve.
3. Review and monthly plan
At the end we review the teaching game and turn the most important ideas into a plan for the coming month. That way every study session and every new game has a clear theme.
The structure is stable. The focus changes as your games and questions change from month to month.
Using the Kyu Dan System with Lite lessons
Your access to the Kyu Dan System is included in this program. For Lite students, it acts as your main training ground between lessons.
- I assign specific lessons and clips to watch after each session.
- We choose openings, tactics, and variations that match what we saw in your games.
- You receive guidance on tsumego: how many problems, which type, and how to approach them.
- The total workload is designed to fit a part time schedule, not a full time training plan.
A simple pattern works well. You play games at your own pace, you study the assigned topics inside Kyu Dan, then you bring your questions and results to the next monthly lesson.
Questions between lessons
Even in the Lite program, you do not need to wait a full month if you are completely stuck on a position or idea.
You can contact me when you:
- meet a position in your own game that you cannot understand,
- are unsure whether a variation or joseki choice makes sense,
- do not know what to focus on next in your study time.
A screenshot, SGF, or game link with a short explanation is enough. The goal is not constant messaging, but to make sure you do not sit with the same confusion for an entire month.
Quick reference
Contact
- Discord: zee7921
- Email: zeejyan@gmail.com
Your basic monthly rhythm:
- Play games at a pace that fits your life.
- Select one or more meaningful games and send them before each lesson.
- Attend your monthly lesson.
- Follow your study plan inside the Kyu Dan System, and ask when you need clarification.
Short questionnaire
To plan your training at a realistic level, please answer the questions below. You can send your answers by email or Discord in simple bullet points.
1. Time and study
- How much time per week can you realistically give to Go, including playing, study, and tsumego.
- When you study Go right now, what do you usually do. For example, videos, books, reviews, or mostly just playing.
2. Tsumego and joseki
- Do you currently solve tsumego. If yes, how often and roughly how many problems at a time.
- How do you feel about memorising joseki variations. Do you enjoy memorising many branches, or do you prefer a smaller set with more focus on understanding.
3. Style and comfort zones
- On the board, do you feel more comfortable with solid territory, or with thickness and influence.
- Do you usually feel happier when the game is fighting and sharp, or when it is calm and stable.
- In what types of positions do you normally feel that you are ahead, and in what types do you feel that you are behind.
Your answers do not need to be perfect. They simply help me choose openings, positions, and study tasks that suit both your style and your schedule.
How to play your games while you are improving
How you play your everyday games has a direct effect on how much you gain from each lesson and review. If you follow the guidelines below, every game you play will support your improvement instead of reinforcing old habits.
- Use proper time settings. Play with at least 1 minute or more byoyomi. If your goal is to improve, avoid ultra fast blitz games. You need enough time to think, to see options, and to apply what you are learning.
- Be selective about where you play. For serious training, play on servers other than OGS. On OGS, many opponents will let you escape with early mistakes because they do not clearly see them either. On more punishing servers, bad habits are exposed faster, which is exactly what you want while you are trying to improve.
- Use the estimation function on purpose. Aim to use the estimation function at least 20 times in a game. Any time you want to start a fight, invade, reduce, or expand, pause and estimate first. In many Asian Go communities, this tool is treated as normal training. It links your feeling for the position with the actual balance on the board. At kyu level, you will not estimate perfectly and that is fine. Your priority now is to improve your moves and habits, not to count like a professional player.
- Slow down every move. Spend at least 10 seconds on each move, even if it looks as simple as connecting against atari. This builds a healthy rhythm and reduces instant, impulsive moves. Ten quiet seconds are often enough to notice if there is a better idea or a hidden weakness.
- Anchor your hand so you do not click impulsively. When you play, keep something in your dominant hand. A bracelet, a fan, a pen, a small fidget toy, anything you like. Decide on your move first, then move your hand to the mouse or screen. This simple habit removes many careless clicks from your games.
- Do not get upset while you are learning. If your real goal is to reach dan level or higher, then a single loss to a random kyu player is not important by itself. Very often that loss simply shows you another weakness that was hidden before. Instead of being angry, treat it as useful information. Each exposed weakness is one more step that lets you climb higher than where you are now.
Two ways to play Go for learning
Once you are serious about improvement, it helps to be intentional about your games. Almost every training game you play can fall into one of the two patterns below.
1. Deep, careful games
In this mode, you play as if every move matters. You slow down, consider several options, and accept the pain of real mistakes. That sting is important. The more clearly you feel where the game slipped away, the less likely you are to repeat the same mistake in the future.
You should have at least one game like this in your routine. Think of it as your serious match, where you try to apply what you have been learning with full focus.
2. Fast drills against stronger AI
The second mode is very different. Here the goal is to drill patterns and sharpen your instinct through volume.
- Play 10 to 50 very fast games against an AI that is about two ranks above you.
- Aim for one game in about five minutes.
- Only play the first 100 moves or less, then stop and start a new game.
- After every game, review briefly with the AI to see where the position collapsed and what the better direction was.
In the short term, this type of training can feel chaotic. Your sense of danger will feel less clear because you are moving quickly and relying on your first feeling. That is normal. You are building a large amount of experience in a short time. This kind of drilling is a common part of professional style training.
If you keep this up every day for at least two weeks, you usually reach a point where you can feel that a move is wrong or that a group is in danger even before you read everything out. When you return to normal time settings, the first few games will feel strange and slow, but after you adjust, you will notice that your instinct and awareness have improved.
A simple pattern to follow
For most students, a balanced routine looks like this:
- Play one serious game with at least 1 minute byoyomi whenever you can.
- Whenever you have extra time, add short fast games against AI, up to 100 moves, and review them briefly with AI after each one.
Your careful games train discipline and clarity. Your fast drills train instinct and pattern recognition. Used together, they make each lesson and each review much more effective.
A note about losing and improvement
When you start to change how you think and play, it is very common to see a losing streak. This does not mean you are getting worse. It usually means you are disrupting old habits that were comfortable but limited, and you have not yet fully stabilised the new way of playing.
The habits that carried you to your current rank are not the same habits that will carry you beyond it. If you insist on keeping the same patterns, you may stay on a plateau for a very long time. When you begin to replace those patterns, your games can feel messy, uncertain, and even frustrating. You may feel that you no longer know what you are doing. That feeling is often a sign that you have stepped outside your old comfort zone.
So do not be discouraged if you lose more than usual while you are experimenting with new choices. Take it as evidence that you are trying new ideas, breaking automatic habits, and allowing your game to grow. Our work together is to guide that process so that, after this uncomfortable phase, your new habits are stronger, clearer, and more stable than what you had before.

