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#1
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Geez (no content)
I was fish food tonight. I lost 75 BB playing 3/6 stud high on party. People were calling me down with ace high or no real draw (read inside str8 with 2 cards dead) and then catching 6th street and/or the river. And 4 flush on 4th street didn't get there once out of the 5 times I had it. Just venting a little bit, was very frusterating.
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#2
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Re: Geez (no content)
that's why they say poker is a hard way of making an easy living. When you're hitting cards, life is great. When your monsters are getting outdrawn, it really, really sucks. What seperates a good poker player from a bad one is not how smart a person is, but how capable that player is at handling downswings.
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#3
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Re: Geez (no content)
Join the club [img]/images/graemlins/smile.gif[/img] 250 BB downswing ATM over last two days, and it came at the worst time as I was just about to move up levels. Oh well.
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#4
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Re: Geez (no content)
Ray Zee mentions that he usually stops after a loss of 50 BB in a single session. This has been a good rule for me to avoid big losses. This gives you the chance to evaluate if you truly have "the best of it."
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#5
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Re: Geez (no content)
I feel I was still making good decisions so I don't think I should have quit at any point. I never let the losses stop me from being aggressive when I figured to have the best of it either. Thanks for the advice.
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#6
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Re: Geez (no content)
That's a huge loss at any level. The first thing you lose when things are going bad is the ability to judge the quality of your decisions. Bad decisions naturally follow.
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#7
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Re: Geez (no content)
I insta-tilt sometimes. By that I mean that I tilt for 1 hand after a bad beat and then its over. I don't do it every time. Actually, I don't do it unless its a string of bad beats, and even then its over after one hand.
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