During your craps-gambling experience, you’ll certainly have more losing sessions than successful times. Go along with it. You have to learn to bet in reality, not in dream land. Craps is designed for the player to not win.
Let us say, after two hours, the ivories have whittled your chip stack down to twenty dollars. You haven’t observed a smokin’ hot throw in a long time. Although losing is as much a part of craps as acquiring a win, you can’t help but feel bad. You begin to think about why you even bothered heading to sin city in the first place. You were patient for two hours, but it did not work. You need to win so badly that you are deprived of control of your common sense. You are down to your last $20 for the session and you have no fight remaining. Call it a day!
You can never give up, never surrender, never believe, "This blows, I’m going to place the remainder on the Hard 4 and, if I lose, then I will head out. But if I succeed, I will be right back where I started." That is the dumbest action you can do at the close of a non-winning night.
If you can not acknowledge losing, you have no business placing wagers. If you can not bear losing a distinct session, then quit that session and take your money. Do not throw your $$$$$ away on a appalling bet looking to make it large and win your cash back in one great go.
If it is a horrible day and you are deprived of a lot swiftly, then acknowledge defeat and take your money with the $10, $15, or $20 that you have remaining. Take that left over twenty dollars, have a drink in the cocktail lounge, listen to the live music. Play the money in a nickel video poker game and maybe hit a one thousand-coin win for $50. Place it in your pocket, find your wife, and spend some time with them. Do not give up. Do something other than pee your $$$$$ away on a losing proposition bet. Do not throw in the towel.
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