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Ask yourself (and then explain to me) why you're doing what you're doing here. What is the purpose of your flop raise, first of all? It seems unlikely to win the pot right there - it's barely more than a min-raise - so it seems to me like you're just trying to "find out where you are," which is a bad reason to do anything. Get past that mentality. You'll find out where you are naturally as you bet for other reasons (to win the pot, for value, etc.).
Secondly: villain who you classified as tight just cold-called two bets on the flop, out of position. That means one of a few things: 1. your read on him is wrong (so he could have a draw - this board has several of them, not to mention overcards if he's really bad); 2. he has a monster (trips or a full house on the flop) and is slowplaying; 3. he has a weakish overpair like yours and feels compelled to show it down. You should immediately start figuring out ranges when he does this on that flop.
Your turn bet is now taking a stab in the dark. What's he got - quads? High cards? A straight or flush draw that will no longer mean anything? An overpair that has become a boat? This turn card has resulted in an atypical wa/wb (way ahead/way behind) situation. Either he has zero to six outs, or you have zero to two outs. Your hand could be good a lot here, depending on just how bad villain is, but I'd encourage you to check behind and try to get to a showdown. If he checks the river you can make a standard value bet and hope to get called by whatever he's got. If he shows down crap - live and learn, take notes on him.
In general, my preferred way to play this is call the flop, re-evaluate the turn. You have a small pot kind of hand, don't build a big one instead. Alternatively, 3-betting pre-flop is fine too, and you can take control of the hand the way you sort of tried to on the flop here.
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