In the now-immortal words of the Kool-Aid man, "Oh, YEAH!"
Hours played...5:26
End Result...+$480.00
Now that's more like it! It's been far too long since I've had one of those "special" days where (a) I played good poker, and (b) the cards didn't fuck me up the whatsit. Sure, there were a couple bad beats...of course, I also inflicted a few myself, so that was a bit of a wash
The day started off crummy, and I was about $150 in the hole after the first hour...but fortunately, I was able to maintain focus, not go on tilt, and battle back to have a truly wonderful session...and by jimminey, it feels great! I haven't checked, but I'd say it's probably been at least three weeks since I've had this good a day. I'm also almost on track as far as my 40-hour goal, but I will have to break the fearsome 6-hour barrier a few times to make it.
In another thread, Ice expressed some surprise that us "pros" have so much trouble booking a 40-hour work week...and on the surface, it does seem ridiculous. When I had a full-time job, there were weeks when I'd work 60+ hours and still manage to put in about 30 at the tables. And now, 25 seems to be a struggle!? I suppose I sort of empathize with KennyG, that poker seems a lot less fun when it's your sole source of income...but at the same time, I definitely still enjoy playing. I realize this paragraph did nothing to explain why it's so tough to get in the hours...so...ummmmm...yeah.
I think I'm also starting to realize from recent sessions that I'd be well-advised to begin every session, say for the first hour, a lot tighter than I'd like. It seems that it generally takes me about that long before I have the focus and confidence to start making the right decisions in marginal situations, e.g. blind-play and LP raises with weak holdings. But once I've played for a bit and have gotten up a bit, I think I do very well in these spots. Come to think of it, that may have been part of the reason for my slump.
Early in March, I was quite the little card-rack. I'd almost always get off to a rockin good start, I'd get a lot of good hands...and thus, my confidence level was high and I could get away with throwing in some extra hands. But when the cards went bad, I still kept entering the same tricky situations, without the benefit of confidence in my reads. That's why it's probably a good idea for me to only open up my game once I'm doing well to begin with.
ANYWAY, it's time to go get drunk...fortunately, for a nice change of pace, it'll be more of a "victory celebration" getting-drunk than the "drowning away of my sorrows" that had become a staple of my measly, pathetic life in weeks past.
Happy Saturday, all!
-TW