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elwoodblues
09-24-2004, 10:02 AM
My family was always into playing cards. We often spent at least one evening per week playing cards (never poker.) We usually played partner games with my brother and I against my parents. When I was really young (grade school), our game of choice was Canasta. In middle school to early high school we played double deck pinochle. At the peak, we would play 1 or 2 games of pinochle every night (usually before dinner.) We shifted back to canasta 10 years ago or so and have been playing that (when we play) ever since.

Each summer we would vacation at my grandparents lake cabin. We would usually play our game of choice (pinochle or canasta -- depending on the game era.) However, if the grandparents wanted to play or we had more people than four, we would usually try something different. This usually led to playing Skip-bo (I think that's the name) or Tripoli/Michigan Rummy. Michigan Rummy/Tripoli contains an element of poker. I suspect that's where I originally learned, but I could have been taught by my brother (I really don't have a specific recollection.)

Every once in a great while, I would play penny ante poker with some friends (grade school.) Then in Jr. High, my older brother, a few of his friends and I would play poker on a semi-regular basis. The game was usually 5 card draw (as this is the form of poker most people learn first) or mindless games like Between the Sheets.

All throughout High School and most of college, I never played a single game of poker. It just dropped off the radar entirely. One New Year's Eve at the home of my then girlfriend (now wife), we all decided to play poker. That's what really started it for me. I had a blast. I was not good, but it was still fun.

I soon decided to try to learn some strategy. A little internet research led me to an on-line book about home games. I don't remember a lot about it except it was more entertainment than strategy (there were such hot tips as don't drink, keep your opponents well fed, and I distinctly remember a side bet where the author offered a loose player that they would share $1 out of every pot they won...the loose player won more, but smaller, pots so the bet was a good one.)

Soon, I was reading everything I could find on the net --- and actually playing fairly rarely. I wanted to learn the game and didn't have too many opportunities to play, so I read a lot. I downloaded a hold 'em game for my palm pilot and played that quite a bit (I really didn't get the whole blind structure for quite some time.) Once I understand the mechanics of the game, I ventured to Canterbury and tried that. I purchased Turbo Texas Hold 'em and tried that. All of that taught me one thing --- I sucked rocks at poker, but still really liked it.

I started buying books TOP, HPFAP, Lee Jones, Gary Carson, Ken Warren (what was I thinking?), Ray Zee and many others now line my shelves. I tried Paradise --- won some money and then tried UB --- won some money and tried Party.

Over the years, I've gotten better. I'm not great by any stretch of the imagination. I'm not making a lot of money. I have no delusions of winning a bracelet. I just really like to play cards. Playing nearly any card game brings faint memories of playing Pinnochle at the lake. It reminds me of sitting around the table with old family and new sharing time together. A deck of cards (or two decks for Canasta, or four for double-deck pinnochle) have provided me a lot of enjoyment over the years.

Poker can be a great way to make money. At times, it can be frustrating as hell. At times, it can be an emotional high. Throughout all the peaks and valleys, both now and in the future, I hope that it always reminds me of sitting around the table playing cards with my family. I hope that it is a tradition that I can pass on to my kids. I hope that poker always remains fun.

nicky g
09-24-2004, 10:19 AM
My dad used to play when he was in university and taught me when I was about 7 to play 5 card draw. I liked it and used to occasionally make friends play for sweets or coins or whatever on and off for years. Somehow discovered 7 card stud along the way and preferred that. I alsways wanted to play more regularly but never found anyone particularly interested. I used to read David Spanier's column in the Independent and I loved the atmosphere he described, although I had no clue about games like Hold'Em and Omaha that he talked about. When Late Night Poker came on the TV in the UK I used to watch it and bought the tie-in book "How To Play Poker And Win" when it came out, which taught me hold'em. THen me and a few friends started a semi-regular home game and I went to play in a ten pound tournament with one of my friends and came fifth, which got my pretty hooked. I bought a lot of books and like you spent more time reading than playing. First started playing 50c-$1 limit at paradise and did badly, losing $50 buy-ins a few times. Then when UB got going I started playing .25-.50 there and did a bit better. When they launched NL games I played exclusively there and finally started doing OK, winning a few hundred bucks. Moved to playing SNGs at UB, then NLHE at party and then eventually PLO, which I play pretty much exclusively now, at Party, UB and Paradise. Make a little money at it, nothing spectacular. Rarely play live. Don't find it as interesting as I used to, to be honest. Would like to move up (beem playing mostly .25-.50 blinds for ages) but I keep having to dip into my bankroll for reasons of chronic skintness /images/graemlins/tongue.gif.

scotnt73
09-24-2004, 10:48 AM
i was always into games like hearts, spades, chess, and magic the gathering growing up. i saw the wsop on tv about 3 years ago and became interested and started studying it and began playing online about 6 months-1 year later.

its pretty amazing because my personality is so obsesive compulsive that my whole life has been:
1)find subject im interested in
2)study and obses over said subject and forget about all other subjects im interested in(this doesnt affect family im talking about hobby\freetime)
3)become bored with subject from burnout after 1-3 months
4)find new subject and start all over

poker keeps my interest so well because its not just black and white and its such a deep subject that ive stuck with it for several years and still enjoy it very much.

adios
09-24-2004, 11:33 AM
I've told this story a few times so hopefully I won't bore anyone. I was a typical degenerate gambler losing steadily and heavily playing the poneys, playing craps, betting on sports and of course poker in the early 80's. There was this magazine call The Gambling Times where I read columns by Caro and Sklansky about poker (btw I remember Mason's initial column about card domination in 21). I remember a particular column that Sklansky wrote about reading hands in 7 stud. I showed it to some friends of mine and we all laughed stating that nobody we knew would think like that in poker. Of course I'd played poker before but I always thought it was a game of total luck. I started reading about this game called hold'em in that magazine and accounts of it being played at the WSOP. My friends and I wondered how the game was played i.e. what were the mechanics of the game. I was making frequent trips to Las Vegas as that was the place for casino action at the time. The Gamblers Book Club store was mentioned in Gambling Times so on one of my trips to Vegas I stopped in. I saw a book called Hold'em Poker and saw that it was written by Sklansky. Since my friends and I wanted to play some hold'em I bought it to learn the mechanics of the game. Of course the book did touch on the mechanics of the game but it also contained a lot more /images/graemlins/smile.gif. Anyway I started reading it and I couldn't believe what I was reading. The light clicked on and I realized there was logic in poker and that there was skill in poker. Well needless to say I didn't show my friends that book but I did teach them the mechanics of the game /images/graemlins/smile.gif. Poker more or less became an obsesion and I quickly lost interest in the negative EV games and realized that I had no great insight into sports betting or the ponies although I've done ok at both since but not enough to even talk about compared to poker.

Kurn, son of Mogh
09-24-2004, 11:37 AM
I'm from a gambling family. My father was a long-time horse player, my cousins all holiday at casinos, and on my mother's side, they always played cards.

Just a natural progression. When I go to family get togethers and say I'm a "semi-pro" poker player, the almost universal reaction is "cool."

ACPlayer
09-24-2004, 11:41 AM
In college and shortly thereafter I used to play competitive bridge. Then I got into card counting in BJ while living in S. Africa where they had a decent, not great 5 deck game. On my return to US I went to FW to see their game and hated the structure. Saw a 1-3 stud game, played a couple of hours (never played Poker before) and realized I could beat this game. Bought all books on Poker, all s/w i could find and studied like in the days of graduate school.

That's it.....

elwoodblues
09-24-2004, 11:55 AM
Just out of curiosity, how would you recommend someone go about learning bridge? I have never played, but would like to learn.

ACPlayer
09-24-2004, 12:00 PM
I learmed it from classmates/friends at first in engineering school. Then read everything I could find on it (I have a slightly[!] obsessive compulsive personality). I was also lucky, while I was working at Carnegie Mellon Univ I had an excellent player as a very good friend. He mentored me through the learning. We ended up travelling the east coast duplicate circuit for a couple of years -- good days.

Toro
09-24-2004, 12:08 PM
Whenever there would be a big family get together, at some point the men would get a poker game going. Me and my brother and my boy cousins would be enthralled while railbirding the games.

When you finally got old enough for them to let you play, I think I was 19 or 20, then you knew you had reached manhood.

M2d
09-24-2004, 12:21 PM
[ QUOTE ]
We usually played partner games with my brother and I against my parents.

[/ QUOTE ]

Does Jake play poker as well?

ThaSaltCracka
09-24-2004, 12:32 PM
My story is probably the lamest one but....
I worked at a movie theater during high school when Rounders came out. I remember most of my male co-workers were all like "Dude, go check this movie out its pretty sweet!", so I went and watched it. I knew very little of poker at the time, but I was instantly hooked. Like many of you guys, I use to play card games with my family, especially hearts and uno. So Poker wasn't that big of a jump. So anyways, my co-workers and I started playing poker.

elwoodblues
09-24-2004, 12:36 PM
For matchsticks in prison.

MaxPower
09-24-2004, 01:33 PM
I don't come from a gambling family. I started playing home poker games in high school with friends and played in occasional games in college. After college, I played in a month home game for years. This was mostly, 5 card draw, 7-card stud, Baseball, Follow the Queen, guts, etc. We had never heard of Texas Holdem.

When I was in grad school, me and two of my grad school buddies would take the bus down to Atlantic City about once month to play blackjack. I became interested in card counting and found out about the KO blackjack count through rec.gambling.blackjack. Since I couldn't find the book in any store, I bought it from Conjelco.

Conjelco started send me a newsletter called The Intelligent Gambler. It had articles by guys named Mason Malmuth and Abdul Jalib. They were about poker, but they made absolutely no sense to me. They were talking about things called the flop, the turn, and the river. This Texas Holdem sounded like a very confusing game. Still, I got the idea from these articles that poker was a gambling game from which one could actually make money.

I took a trip to Vegas with my grad school buddies and we played blackjack all weekend. On the morning we were leaving we sat at a blackjack table outside the Mirage poker room. At that point I decided that I would learn how to play Texas Holdem when I got home.

The movie on the flight back was Rounders which I had never seen. I watched the first 2 minutes of it and then fell asleep.

When I got home I ordered Lee Jones' book and Theory of Poker. After reading those I headed down to the Taj for my first try at 3/6 Holdem. I won $17. A few days later I made my first post on 2+2 (http://www.twoplustwo.com/digests/mar99_msg.html#17013) and the rest was history.

Looking at my first post its amazing how clueless I was. Also looking at it now, I don't think the responses were very good. I'm also not sure why I posted it under the name "Jake" - what was I thinking?