During your craps-gambling experience, you’ll likely have more non-winning sessions than winners. Go along with it. You must learn to bet in the real world, not in dream land. Craps is constructed for the participant to lose.
Let us say, after two hours, the dice have eaten away at your chip stack down to twenty dollars. You have not observed a smokin’ hot throw in ages. Although squandering is as much a part of the game as being victorious, you can not help but feel cursed. You begin to wonder why you even bothered heading to Vegas to start with. You were solid for 2 hours, but it didn’t work. You need to succeed so badly that you fritter away control of your clear thinking. You’re down to your final twenty dollars for the session and you have little fight left. Leave!
You can never give up, never bow out, never believe, "This sucks, I am going to put the rest on the Hard 4 and, if I lose, then I will walk away. However if I succeed, I will be back where I began." That is the dumbest action you can perform at the close of a losing day.
If you can not accept losing, you have no business placing bets. If you can not accept not winning a particular session, then quit that session and cash out. Do not throw your $$$$$ away on a horrible wager looking to hit it large and get your cash back in one bet.
If it’s an awful day and you are deprived of a lot rapidly, then acknowledge defeat and cash out with the 10 dollars, 15 dollars, or twenty dollars that you have remaining. Take that left over twenty dollars, have a BEvERage in the cocktail lounge, enjoy the band. Play the money in a five cent electronic poker machine and maybe hit a 1,000-coin jackpot for $50. Keep it in your wallet, find your lady, and spend some time with her. Do not relent. Do something besides pee your $$$$ away on a non-winning proposition wager. Don’t toss in the towel.
This entry was posted on January 28, 2010, 2:21 pm and is filed under Craps. You can follow any responses to this entry through RSS 2.0. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.