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Tilt
Being on tilt means letting your emotions disrupt your
ability to play. All poker players go on tilt,
but limiting these episodes is essential to winning at poker. Poker is a game
that requires reason. If you have JQ of spades, and the flop comes AQ10, all of
hearts, and there is a lot of betting action, you need to know to fold. If you
were on tilt, you would let your emotions take control and make you do whatever
it took to take down the pot. You would keep chasing, hoping to catch a king and
hoping that no one had a flush.
In general, people who get upset and don't stay focused
and reasonable will lose all the money they brought to the table. Poker is
almost anti-human in the way it triggers emotions but rewards people who are
made of stone. I don't mean to scare you or act as if all poker players are
unemotional stones, but it is imperative to stay focused and rational while at
the poker table.
Generally, most players tilt due to a bad beat or if
they just can't seem to win a hand. Some players have a slight tilt after they
win a big hand or two, but those episodes generally are much shorter than tilts
caused by losing.
For example, take a hand I played recently. I had AQ and
the flop came AQ2. I bet and was called. A 10 came on the turn. Bet, call. River
was a 7. I bet and he raised. I decided to just call, thinking he may have
actually had KJ. No, he had 77. The idiot had called me to the river with little
hope but won on a very lucky river catch. Needless to say, I was not playing
well the next couple of hands.
While going on tilt is natural, you need to limit it.
Generally, the best way is to sit out a couple of hands and go on a walk.
Another good way to handle a bad beat is to just think about all the bad beats
you have laid in the past. After the bad beat I mentioned above, I sat back and
thought about the time I stupidly went all in in a pot limit Omaha with bottom
set. I had 33J7, 3J7 of spades, and there was 368 on the board- the 8 was a
spade. My opponent had 88, and the best hand when all the money went into the pot. I
was lucky enough to catch a backdoor flush on the turn-river and took down a
huge pot. I went on to win the most money that day that I have ever won. If I
had lost that hand, I probably would have called it quits and never would have
won all of that money. Thinking about the time I pulled off this bad beat and
went on to win such a huge sum helps me get through the times that some idiot
rivers me.
Many people, myself included, tend to curse at the
computer if they get bad beat. However, for myself at least, cursing is not
nearly as therapeutic as thinking about that huge bad beat I laid at the Omaha
table. Cursing tends to make you more mad and will cause you to develop some bad
habits. When you are about to go on tilt, sit out and think of happy thoughts
(as cheesy as it sounds, it's true) and hopefully you can resume playing your
best.
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