Okay here is the $2NL 10K hand results:

A few comments:
I started off playing pretty well. I made a few bad calls for my stack which I shouldn't have, but I managed to get around that and keep grinding. Once I hit the 7K mark or so though I played really bad. I was pretty busy with school and things at home that my mind just wasn't in the game. I was basically playing on tilt without even realizing it - until I checked out my PT graph! It sucks that I played like such a spewy donkey there, but I learned from it. I learned that poker requires concentration and a clear head - at all times. I do my best to play with a clear head now whenever I log on. With my hectic schedule it's tough to always find the best time to play, but I can usually fit at least 2 hours a day.

One more note on when I ran bad + play bad: (mostly just play bad though)
The red line starts to slope downwards at a sharper pace.
My thoughts on this....
Because I wasn't playing my optimal game between 7K and 10K hands, I realized that I was picking really bad spots. I was making hopeless bluffs, chickening out on stealing when I should be putting the chips in the middle, and calling off too light. Therefore, bluffing at hopeless pots + not picking up enough uncontested pots led to my money won without showdown being lower than it should have been.

Thank god I donked of a few BI's at the beginning of my operation so I can learn from it with minimal financial loss and recognize the cause before the effect takes place.

Lately I've been playing more hands/day. I'm trying to get $5NL done by March, and also learn some 6-max too. I'll post some stats and maybe bring up some random hand histories from $2NL, but I won't have any reads other than HUD stats since I won't remember the hands by now. I won't play more than 6 tables, and I usually just play 4. Starting with one, adding another, and then adding 2 more once I feel I'm fully engaged. Alright now I bet you all want to see my stats now (I'll warn you they're nitty as f**k, lol) so that will be in the next post.