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The answer is simple. Only put money in when your hand is currently the best one. This can be when you both miss the flop, but for now stick to only putting money in against calling stations when you DO hit the flop, or have a very strong draw.
As for you describing your style, stop visualizing yourself with a set style, so that you can change it on a whim to suit the table conditions. I myself "enjoy" being aggressive, but it doesn't mean I am when I shouldn't be. You need to begin formulating counterstrategy to the players you're sitting with. Here's an example...
You sit down at a table, and every time someone raises, 3-4 people call. Furthermore, people are trying to float on second pairs, generally taking their hands too far postflop. Are you going to be overaggressive on a table with a lot of money going in the middle? That would be stupid. You're going to abandon anything overaggressive, and instead feast on value when your hand is made.
You narrow your raising range to only premium hands. You limp 99-JJ for set value. You open up your calling range when pot odds are presented to you out of position (You have 9To in the BB with a 3xBB raiser followed by 3 callers ahead of you). This is because these tables tend to give you lots of drawing odds postflop.
There are different things you do against different table textures. Against a table full of intelligent loose aggressives for instance, you would become loose passive with a wider range half the time. You would tend not to encourage the aggressor from shutting down the betting by letting him know he's beat, instead calling down his larger and larger purchase attempts on safe streets. If the board looks like it could draw against you, then you become aggressive, since the opponent may make bad calls anyway if they're drawing on you. When you get better you get fancier, doing things such as using a coordination that neither of you are hitting against an opponent.
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