I've been playing poker long enough to know that the cards are the easy part. You can study hand ranges, memorize pot odds, watch every training video out there, and you'll still get destroyed by your own head. Daniel Negreanu once said that tilt causes more damage than any strategic leak, and after years at the felt, I can tell you that's not an exaggeration.
Every time I take a bad beat, I make a conscious effort to react positively. Not fake smile and suppress it positively. I mean actually celebrate. Laugh it off, shake your head with a grin. Make your body physically express something other than frustration. The more you do it, the more your brain stops associating losing with self-destruction.
The best poker players I've ever sat across from weren't the ones who never lost. They were the ones who lost better than everyone else. Poker just makes that truth impossible to ignore, hand after hand.
Treat every loss as tuition. The table is always teaching.
Every time I take a bad beat, I make a conscious effort to react positively. Not fake smile and suppress it positively. I mean actually celebrate. Laugh it off, shake your head with a grin. Make your body physically express something other than frustration. The more you do it, the more your brain stops associating losing with self-destruction.
The best poker players I've ever sat across from weren't the ones who never lost. They were the ones who lost better than everyone else. Poker just makes that truth impossible to ignore, hand after hand.
Treat every loss as tuition. The table is always teaching.