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 Originally Posted by salsa4ever
 Originally Posted by SonOfAkira
As i' m sure you know, that is the nature of no limit, wild swings.
The more serious and competitive one gets with an activity, the more weight it starts to possess and the more pressure it brings, the more it starts to define a person's well being and identity.
The more you start to realize that you ACtually are good at poker, and the bigger money you start to play for, the more that the pressure to succeed comes with it, the more you start to be defined by the goals you set for yourself, even if these goals are largely subconcious.
As i' m sure you know already, with dance, anytime you take something beyond the level of a hobby and make it a career, even a part time career, and a serious part of your life, this stress will happen, this "circle of death". Some time and reflection, some deep breaths, some serious evaluation will easily get you past it, though.
There is this scene in this movie "hoosiers", about high school basketball in Indiana. I myself didn't really care for the movie and found it corny, but this scene has a good message. The coach takes the players, who are very small-town, to the gym where they will be playing the championship. It is a very large arena, and he has them take a tape measure and measure the height of the basketball rim, and the length of the free-throw line. And he tells them, "See, it's no different than what you've been used to. The free-throw line is still 15 feet, the hoop is still 10 feet, the same as you've always played you're whole lives."
I think a brief period of personal reflection will make you remember that it's still the same thing, the 52 cards falling down in their random patterns, that you've been playing successfully for the past year.
My apologies if this is too long and verbose, I figured it was better than just saying, "hey man, hang in there..."
But... If nothing else, hey man, hang in there.
Wow, what a post! I can see you put serious effort in that for me, and thank you very much!
BTW, what limits do you play? Have you had this problem and did you / how did you overcome it?
In my limited experience, NL200 is about twice as swingy as NL100 in a relative sense, so it's about 4 times the variance in absolute terms. Reasons - the players are actually worse in that it seems to be the limit where you separate most of the 'grinders' from the 'gamboolers'. I've caught so many more bluffs at this limit. You still gotta be judicious with TPTK, but often it's good. You have to be focused on the game and trust your reads.
Epilogue:
Last night I had a good session again, and I recovered my losses (made $8 or so for the adventure). I've learnt so much about my game and myself the last two days I wouldn't trade it in for anything else.
Finished a bonus this morning and gritted my way to a $60 win... just didn't hit anything except for one set.
No worries. I'm a writer by profession, so the effort wasn't incredibly serious. I'm more knowledgable with the words than I am the poker. Plus, I was a bit drunk so it flowed out reasonably well, with only a few typos on top. Thank you much, regardless.
I mainly settled into a groove of playing 100NL now, it seems to be the easiest money with all factors considered. The micro-limits are technically the easiest, but the play is so ridiculous, and even an astronomical BB/100 winrate isn't netting you serious cash. I started playing 50NL, and did pretty good until I realized I was getting frustrated with what I've learned is common knowledge around here, that it is a rock garden, and have flirted with all the limits, even as high as 1000NL, though I only played 200, 400, and 1000 one night each. I broke even at 200 and 400 and won about 3/4 a buyin at 1000, but quickly realized that I wasn't nearly comfortable enough throwing that much money around, even if I have it at my disposal. With 100NL, even a decent winrate is still taking home some nice cash.
In how this pertains to the topic at hand, I think I go through what you're going through every few days! Though not as severe. I'll occasionally play micro limits, not the smallest but the one right above, for two reasons. 1, if i'm in a poker mood but am not in the best state to play, either drunk or fatigued or both, and 2, if I feel a lack of confidence, that I might be playing with scared money. Save for one time, this has always done the trick.
I've always been prone to psychological duress when doing something competively, and poker is no different. I've even more prone to the less discussed but equally dangerous anti-tilt. The feeling you get, the one you describe and AOK verifies, due to an over-abundance of confidence where you feel you can do no wrong, and before you know it you've donked away a few hands, and you don't just come back to earth, but sink below, and wonder how could you ever have been so foolish to think YOU are actually good at poker. There is much talk about the circle of death affecting newbies, and it obviously is the most sever for a newbie, but i'd say that everybody save for the most seasoned of veterans will go through it periodically.
The main point i'd like to make is that the newbie circle of death has little to do with being a newbie to poker. It has to do with being a newbie to taking poker seriously, regardless of your experience and skill level. For myself, I realized settling into a groove was the best thing, and figuring out whether I wanted to try to crush a smaller game, or just win decently at a bigger game, or where in between. This experience you had I believe had much to do with just upsetting your groove, being removed from your comfort level, the newbie circle of death but on a smaller scale with different parameters, and once this passes you'll do fine. Experience in anything, as i'm sure you know, routine, though takes away from the excitement somewhat does much to alleviate these pschyological hangups, and is +EV, if you're treating poker like a job, even a part time job.
Besides beating the devil out of the micro stakes players, still something i'd recommend for stress relief (assuming you don't run into pelion or freechus) I have one other recommendation. Try playing a different variaton of poker that you're unfamiliar with. Maybe it's omaha or seven-card-stud, for small stakes or even play money. It'll not only improve you're overall poker ability, it will, after wading through some serious confusion (I didn't know you had to use two and only two of your hole cards in omaha when I played my first hand), make you realize just how much knowledge you have in texas hold 'em.
I'm glad to hear things are turning around.
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