by Rhound50 » Fri Jun 10, 2005 7:51 pm
As you said Ice, these strings of bad beats make you want to flip the table over, punch a wall or whatever your stress realease is, but as you said it makes you a better player in the long run. When you look a the top pro's, it is always amazing to me how well they take bad beats. Howard Lederer getting his set busted but Doyles rived flush in the WSOP, and what does he do? He calmly gets up says nice hand, and walks away. Me i would have done all I could not to complely lose it. The difference is, for his this is just business as usual, he has had it happen a million times, and it will happen again.
One thing that struck me when, I was reading AlexMR's posts about his recent losing streak, was that I knew exactly how he fekt ,we have all been there. The thing is the more it happens to me over time the better I react to it. Ice this will be the same with you, not that you need to learn how to take bad beats, but you will look back at this run in 2 months and you will grow as a poker player from it. And yes that is a god awfull run of luck.
"Its a pink handbag not backpack damn it." Godlikeroy
"From playing full tilt I wanna smash every garden gnome I see. That travelocity commercial puts me on instant tilt."