It did, thanks.

No idea what my BB/100 is, but I managed to pull myself out of my unlucky streak today. I went from around $25 to $42 today, which is probably my largest win yet, though I've dropped down to about $39ish now.

Took a pretty horrible beat earlier tonight, though I don't think I played it very well. I had Ace Ten off-suit in middle position against a very loose table. Most of these guys would limp in or min-raise with any two cards, and even though my VPIP was under 20% I noticed that if I made a standard raise of 4xBB most of the limpers would back off. ATo seemed like an okay hand to raise with in middle position when I'm the first to act, so I raised it to 4xBB (8 cents). The very next person calls, and so does the next person, and finally the big blind calls.

I've got 1.92 left, the person to my left has 2.38, the person to his left has 1.84 and the big blind has a mere 16 cents. I've noticed that the 1.84 guy calls pre-flop with a pretty wide range but shuts down if he misses the flop, and the guy immediately to my left is an absolute calling station. His range is enormous, and I've seen him make all-in calls with bottom pair or even with no pair at all.

The flop comes AKT, all hearts. I've flopped two pair, but with those hearts I'm potentially in big trouble. The big blind goes all in for his last 16 cents, so I figure it's pretty safe to just call, which should help disguise my hand a bit while I try to figure out where I'm at.

The loose guy min-raises to 32 cents, which I've seen him do half a dozen times already, and every single time he was bluffing. That's been my pretty solid read on this guy, whenever he has a strong hand he tends to overbet the pot, and go all in, and whenever he has a really crappy hand he min-raises as a weak way to push people out of the pot. The guy to his left folds, and the action comes back to me, and I flat call. The turn brings a 7 of diamonds, and I pushed. I wasn't really happy about the push, but I'd seen this guy bluff on too many pots and I figured if I waited for him to push I'd be stuck with the tough decision. I figured this way I could at least represent the flush, and maybe push him off of it even if he had it. He calls, and flips over the goddamn Queen-Jack of Hearts, and scores his royal goddamn flush. I bang my head repeatedly against my desk feeling like a donkey who should've known better.

On the other hand, it's the first royal flush I've seen, and I only lost 2 dollars to it, so I suppose it's not the end of the world (though I'm still not happy about the donkey push).