Hand 1: Rather loose call, but he had shit, so I assume you had a good read on him. Looks like a typical maniac.

Hand 2: I don't like that check raise on the turn at all. If you think he has a lower pair, bet a rather small amount again (value bet), as it seems like they're just going to call it down here. If you think he has the Q, fold to that bet on the turn. Its not that big of a pot anyway. And if you think about it, your hand was much better preflop than it was post flop, so if you're going to make a big raise without getting help and with an overcard out, do it preflop. Personally, I'm always very cautious with TT. Only time I really play it hard, besides hitting a set or a low flop of course, is when I'm short stacked in a tournament, and its a good all in hand.

Hand 3: Absolutely nothing you can do about this.

Hand 4: I wouldn't ever reraise that on the turn. Someone's already raised in front of you, so you should know that they have a K and probably a higher kicker. You'd probably call his rather small all in on the river anyway, so it doesn't matter much this specific instance, but you should be thinking you're likely beat here, and that raise on the flop would usually be devestating against a big stack, since you shouldn't call a huge bet on the river, you'd likely just be throwing those chips on the turn away.

Hand 5: By far the hardest decision yet. But its only a $5 raise to a much larger pot. I'd call this one, see if the board pairs, and see how he reacts on the river if it doesn't, to try and read if he has the straight, or if he has something like 2 pair or a lower set and is worried that you have the straight. I think you're laying a set down too easily here, especially given the fact that you have outs even if he does have a straight, and its not that big of a raise.

Hand 6: Tough beat. Before looking at what they had though, I was thinking you should check raise the flop. I almost always check to a preflop raiser from a blind, no matter what I hit. How they react to a check raise will give you a lot more information. But I have a feeling he would've called you anyway, and sucked out on you, so there's not much you could do to avoid this one.

Hand 7: Rather easy fold if you have a big stack. You don't, so the call is ok at the flop. You've already put in like half your stack, and they're more likely to bluff when you're that low, so I'd probably call too. Well played, tough beat.

Hand 8: Absolutely nothing wrong with this one. Even a professional rock would show this down. And you're the SB, so I think your check on the flop was 100% justified with 5 players in the hand.

Hand 9: You should check the flop. Since you didn't preflop raise, there isn't much reason to bet here. Check and see how they react. Good call on the river, even though you lost. Looks like a bluff, and really, they may have been trying to bluff you out, putting you on a Q with a higher kicker, and representing that they tried unsuccessfully to check raise their ace on the turn.

Hand 10: My god, this is a passive game. KK and no reraise preflop?! Anyway, you played this one fine obviously. Tough beat.