|
I just finished reading Poker Nation, and while its an OK book, there's one pretty keen observation... the author was studying to be a doctor and when he cut into his first cadaver he threw up for an hour and decided it wasn't for him.... Obviously, a doctor has to shut off his sense of compassion at least a little bit, even though they spend 10+ years studying to help people they have to shut down or they won't survive the first time someone dies under their care or they had to cut a guys arm off because their suture technique wasn't working.
He extends that to poker, that eventually all good players, for better or worse, stop valuing money or don't value it as much. Pure and simple you can't lay into the blinds with a quarter of your stack w/ 72o in a 10k tournament if you value every penny you've ever earned, like a doctor you've got to disconnect yourself from it or you'll murder yourself when you get called or you get knocked out. In the long term, that improves your game.
Anyway, doesn't really help your situation, but I think being a bi-product of playing poker is that you have to de-value your money a little bit, it is a bit of a good thing, because if you valued it you'd never be stealing bilnds or making calculated risks (Like measuring pot odds.)
Not to say that can't go too far, and you can be taking uncalculated risks and simply not valuing money at all instead of devaluing it a little bit.
|