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Poker is Good for your health...I knew it :D Poker is Good for your health...I knew it :D

08-25-2011 , 04:12 PM
This is not true. My guess is someone made this up. This site is just one example of why. I guess Black Jack is good for you too. From what I can tell the study mentioned playing online games but did not specify gambling. I would assume it was referring to other types of games.

http://howtoblackjack.org/online-bla...our-health/85/
Poker is Good for your health...I knew it :D Quote
08-26-2011 , 09:00 PM
Quote:
Originally Posted by HeyEveryone
One interesting study exposed mice to extreme stress until their bodies were no longer able to produce much cortisol. At that point they no longer had much of a fight or flight response and did not react to stress. This possibly seems good for some peoples poker game but it is not since it significantly reduces activity in the hippocampus, cortex, and basal forebrain, which are vital to higher level thinking. It is pretty bad for one's physical and mental health.
I don't think that'll be a problem for me... you can't miss what you never had.
Poker is Good for your health...I knew it :D Quote
08-29-2011 , 05:11 PM
Quote:
Originally Posted by Poker Clif
I don't dispute that there is stess in poker when the money matters. When my wife wants to know how much I'm going to contribute to the family finances, that's very different from playing for "fun"--even though it is fun for me in the sense that I enjoy it more than most of the jobs I've had. In fact, it's the second most intellectually stimulating job I've had.

But isn't there stress involved in performing at a high level in just about any endeavor? A clarinet player is under stress when she is one of 20 players auditioning for one open spot in an orchestra. A quarterback is under stress playing in a Super Bowl game that is tied in the 4th quarter with a 330-pound lineman about to drive him into the ground. A salesman working on commission is under stress when he is trying to land a million dollar account.

And you haven't seen stress until you've been involved in a political campaign and you're waiting for the results on election night--good days or bad days don't matter, and there is no variance. It's binary--you win, or you lose.

What I'm saying comes down to this: Where stress is concerned, what makes poker so special?
Poker is uniquely stressful because:

A) Stressful situations occur often in a single day unlike most jobs where there are specific instances that induce stress and if said instance occurs it normally is not more frequent than once a day.

B) In poker, unlike in most jobs, the ultimate outcome of your day (winning or losing money) is not up to you. I mean sure you can run really well sometimes and have a guy put in his stack drawing stone dead but the vast majority of the time all you can do is get your money in good and pray. You can make every decision correctly, never put a dime in the pot with the worst hand, make great fold after great fold and simply play 100% perfect poker and STILL LOSE.

There is pretty much no other endeavor or job whereby you can wake up, go to work, do a 100% perfect job and not only not get paid for your effort, but actually leave with LESS money than you came to work with. If that's not a stressful profession you tell me what is.
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09-12-2011 , 07:05 AM
There is nothing unique about Poker in comparison with other activities in life.

If it is your job then it automatically inherits all the risks and with them all the stress related with them.

If it is a recreational activity then it automatically inherits all the carefree social aspects of hobbies and fun activities.

Also there is a huge difference between stress and suffering.

Recreational activities that may be competitive or/and have a higher risk factor, can still cause high stress levels but they very rarely cause suffering, and in many occasion such activities help reduce suffering, which is the point i believe the OP wants to make.

Jobs on the other hand although they can be quite meaningless with minimum stress or risk they still can cause an extremely high level of suffering in fact it has been proven that this kind of jobs are often connected with serious psychological problems.

The majority of times Poker is just another activity in ones life, and it is the individuals personality that will dictate how it is performed and what impact it will have in his life, there is nothing special about it one way or another.
Poker is Good for your health...I knew it :D Quote
09-12-2011 , 06:24 PM
Quote:
Originally Posted by Duces
Recent research at a Canadian University indicates that poker is good for releasing stress. This result has come as a surprise to many who view poker as a high stress and high risk game.

The cortisol levels of online poker players was monitored as they played online poker and it was found that their cortisol, otherwise known as “the stress hormone”, levels dropped significantly as they played. The levels continued to drop, by up to 17%, as the players progressed and became increasingly engaged in the game.

The reasoning behind this, Canadian scientists believe, is that the intense focus given during the poker game allows the players to forget or move their focus away from their daily responsibilities and worries. The intense focus is required because poker is such a complex game and players naturally get drawn in when playing. By taking a break from constantly thinking and worrying about daily responsibilities, the brain starts releasing less and less cortisol.

Prior to this research, it was also found by scientists that online gambling also improves the cognitive functioning of the brain. This applies to poker especially because of the never ending variables in the game- players are constantly thinking and learning and adapting and this provides excellent exercise for the brain.

So by playing poker, players are reducing stress as well as exercising the brain. These findings might have an influence in the US where whether to legalize online poker is an ongoing debate.
Yeah I feel really "de-stressed" after doing my bollox on the weekend
Poker is Good for your health...I knew it :D Quote
09-21-2011 , 10:45 AM
good please .
Poker is Good for your health...I knew it :D Quote
09-21-2011 , 11:56 AM
I think research on loss aversion in poker shows to the contrary.

Research shows that the effects of losing impact us twice as much as the effects of winning.
So a break-even player spends most of his time unhappy.
A winning player spends most of his time neither happy nor sad.
So only the most successful players are actually happy.

This video explains loss aversion pretty well:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nOX1Hn-bw1k

Although being healthy and being happy are arguably two completely different things, I think our levels of happiness do significantly effect our levels of healthiness, at least in the emotional sense of healthiness.
Poker is Good for your health...I knew it :D Quote
09-22-2011 , 12:30 AM
Quote:
Originally Posted by usernameslol
I think research on loss aversion in poker shows to the contrary.

Research shows that the effects of losing impact us twice as much as the effects of winning.
So a break-even player spends most of his time unhappy.
A winning player spends most of his time neither happy nor sad.
So only the most successful players are actually happy.


This video explains loss aversion pretty well:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nOX1Hn-bw1k

Although being healthy and being happy are arguably two completely different things, I think our levels of happiness do significantly effect our levels of healthiness, at least in the emotional sense of healthiness.
That's certainly not how good MTT players think. Before Black Friday I would often play in tournaments with 2,000 or more players. I knew that I wasn't going to cash most of time. Every MTT player knows that.

Good poker players have to be able to think in the long-term, and many of us do. I don't think about one tournament, or a day, or a week. I'm happy if I've made a certain amount of money playing at the end of the year. My goal is to be in the black every month, but I'm not going to be demoralized if I have a losing month. One of the reasons for BRM is having a cushion to get you through the losing streaks.

I had a net loss at MTTs, but I didn't have much of a sample size before Black Friday happened. Before that I played SNGs for several years, and at $10 STT I had an ROI of 14%. That number means something. How well I did in a day, or a week, means nothing. Successful players understand this, and they don't spend most of their time unhappy.

Last edited by Poker Clif; 09-22-2011 at 12:35 AM. Reason: Sentence structure. No significant content change.
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09-22-2011 , 03:41 PM
Quote:
Originally Posted by Poker Clif
That's certainly not how good MTT players think. Before Black Friday I would often play in tournaments with 2,000 or more players. I knew that I wasn't going to cash most of time. Every MTT player knows that.

Good poker players have to be able to think in the long-term, and many of us do. I don't think about one tournament, or a day, or a week. I'm happy if I've made a certain amount of money playing at the end of the year. My goal is to be in the black every month, but I'm not going to be demoralized if I have a losing month. One of the reasons for BRM is having a cushion to get you through the losing streaks.

I had a net loss at MTTs, but I didn't have much of a sample size before Black Friday happened. Before that I played SNGs for several years, and at $10 STT I had an ROI of 14%. That number means something. How well I did in a day, or a week, means nothing. Successful players understand this, and they don't spend most of their time unhappy.
Poker Clif,

This was a really great response.

I actually don't think we are in disagreement.

I agree with you that winning players have adjusted there expectations to accommodate for short-term loses.

All I was saying was that, for a winning player - a 'winning player' in its core definition i.e. twice as many wins than loses, they are neither happy nor sad. This is because loses, on average, have twice the impact than the gains or wins, so therefore they stay 'happiness neutral'. The greater the number of wins, the happier the person becomes, as the impact of the loses becomes more insignificant.

I suppose you may argue that because winning players adjust their expectations accordingly, loss aversion becomes inapplicable, as the loses have no greater or lesser impact than the wins, which is what you may be trying to say?

Liam.
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09-22-2011 , 10:41 PM
Quote:
Originally Posted by naskocom
This study is true only for people who don`t care about money when they play ,when the play is very important for u afcourse there is stress involved
I destroyed a keyboard yesterday over a freeroll.

Go me.
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09-23-2011 , 11:19 AM
Quote:
Originally Posted by usernameslol
Poker Clif,

This was a really great response.

I actually don't think we are in disagreement.

I agree with you that winning players have adjusted there expectations to accommodate for short-term loses.

All I was saying was that, for a winning player - a 'winning player' in its core definition i.e. twice as many wins than loses, they are neither happy nor sad. This is because loses, on average, have twice the impact than the gains or wins, so therefore they stay 'happiness neutral'. The greater the number of wins, the happier the person becomes, as the impact of the loses becomes more insignificant.

I suppose you may argue that because winning players adjust their expectations accordingly, loss aversion becomes inapplicable, as the loses have no greater or lesser impact than the wins, which is what you may be trying to say?

Liam.
I appreciate your comment about my "great response". I spend more time in Beginner's Questions than anywhere else on 2+2. I consider my posts carefully, and often edit them after I read the finished product. I am always aware that more players than the one that I am responding to will be reading it, and I can't say enough about what posters in this thread have done for me.

The bolded part of your response is exactly correct. I'm new to live tournament play (well, new to taking it seriously at least). I had been playing a live tournament once every few months "for fun". I played my first serious live tournament last week and I was thrilled to get the final cashing spot (getting most of my buy-in back).

My expectation is to break even in my first 10 or so tournaments, because I'm learning a lot of the mechanics that I didn't have to worry about in online play, such as keeping track of pot size and bet and stack sizes, and all the stuff that I used to track with a HUD. Plus, I still have to learn about tells and a lot of other facets of live games. And on top of that, the charity rake is 20%, so I'm not going to get rich overnight playing these games!

In case anyone is wondering why I would pay the 20% charity rake, I do not live within 100 miles of a casino that holds poker touraments. Also, I'm carefully building a live bankroll, and driving 5 miles to a $20-$30 "starter" charity tournament is a lot easier on the bankroll than driving 120 miles to play in a casino's $50-$100 lowest buy-in tournament.

I didn't expect to cash my first "serious" time out, and the only reason that I expect to break even after 10 tournaments is because the players are really bad (worse than an average $1 online STT) and the fields in the $20-$30 tournaments are small, usually 30 players or less, and small field size cuts the variance way down.

It's all about realistic expectations. I was hoping to cash in at least 3 of my first 10, so doing it the first time out was pretty exciting. And even though I have a massive edge against the field, I understand variance, and I would have been dissappointed, but not crushed, if I went 0 for 10.

You said it well. The "happiness" issue that you raised is all about proper expectation. It's easy to watch poker on TV and say, "I could do that." You're a killer at play money games, or you crush your favorite home game. You could be poker's next big thing!

It happened to me. I got a couple poker books from the library, and soon I was fake-cashing about half of the time against fields of thousands of players--at AOL World Series of Poker. I often went very deep, and there was a woman that seemed to always wind up at my table (more than once at the final table). So we kept telling each other how good we were, reinforcing our delusions. As we used to say when I was in 6th grade, I thought I was hot snot on a silver platter, but I was really cold boogers on a paper plate.

In 2006 I put $50 on PokerStars, and after three months of being slightly up, I lost it all. I had to admit to myself, and my wife, that I wasn't nearly as good as I had thought. But I kept at it, I kept studying, and I eventually found 2+2, where there were good players that not only told me that I wasn't good, but they also told me what I was doing wrong.

Fast forward to September 2011, and I'm seeing if I have what it takes to be a live pro.

Last edited by Poker Clif; 09-23-2011 at 11:21 AM. Reason: clarity
Poker is Good for your health...I knew it :D Quote
09-23-2011 , 11:28 AM
Quote:
Originally Posted by usernameslol
Poker Clif,

This was a really great response.

I actually don't think we are in disagreement.

I agree with you that winning players have adjusted there expectations to accommodate for short-term loses.

All I was saying was that, for a winning player - a 'winning player' in its core definition i.e. twice as many wins than loses, they are neither happy nor sad. This is because loses, on average, have twice the impact than the gains or wins, so therefore they stay 'happiness neutral'. The greater the number of wins, the happier the person becomes, as the impact of the loses becomes more insignificant.

I suppose you may argue that because winning players adjust their expectations accordingly, loss aversion becomes inapplicable, as the loses have no greater or lesser impact than the wins, which is what you may be trying to say?

Liam.
I appreciate your comment about my "great response". I spend more time in Beginner's Questions than anywhere else on 2+2. I consider my posts carefully, and often edit them after I read the finished product. I am always aware that more players than the one that I am responding to will be reading it, and I can't say enough about what posters in this thread have done for me.

The bolded part of your response is exactly correct. I'm new to live tournament play (well, new to taking it seriously at least). I had been playing a live tournament once every few months "for fun". I played my first serious live tournament last week and I was thrilled to get the final cashing spot (getting most of my buy-in back).

My expectation is to break even in my first 10 or so tournaments, because I'm learning a lot of the mechanics that I didn't have to worry about in online play, such as keeping track of pot size and bet and stack sizes, and all the stuff that I used to track with a HUD. Plus, I still have to learn about tells and a lot of other facets of live games. And on top of that, the charity rake is 20%, so I'm not going to get rich overnight playing these games!

In case anyone is wondering why I would pay the 20% charity rake, I do not live within 100 miles of a casino that holds poker touraments. Also, I'm carefully building a live bankroll, and driving 5 miles to a $20 "starter" charity tournament is a lot easier on the bankroll than driving 120 miles to play in a casino's $50-$100 lowest buy-in tournament.

I didn't expect to cash my first "serious" time out, and the only reason that I expect to break even after 10 tournaments is because the players are really bad (worse than an average $1 online STT) and the fields in the $20-$30 tournaments are small, usually 30 players or less, and small field size cuts the variance way down.

It's all about realistic expectations. I was hoping to cash in at least 3 of my first 10, so doing it the first time out was pretty exciting. And even though I have a massive edge against the field, I understand variance, and I would have been dissappointed, but not crushed, if I went 0 for 10.

You said it well. The "happiness" issue that you raised is all about proper expectation. It's easy to watch poker on TV and say, "I could do that." You're a killer at play money games, or you crush your favorite home game. You could be poker's next big thing!

It happened to me. I got a couple poker books from the library, and soon I was fake-cashing about half of the time against fields of thousands of players--at AOL World Series of Poker. I often went very deep, and there was a woman that seemed to always wind up at my table (more than once at the final table). So we kept telling each other how good we were, reinforcing our delusions. As we used to say when I was in 6th grade, I thought I was hot snot on a silver platter, but I was really cold boogers on a paper plate.

In 2006 I put $50 on PokerStars, and after three months of being slightly up, I lost it all. I had to admit to myself, and my wife, that I wasn't nearly as good as I had thought. But I kept at it, I kept studying, and I eventually found 2+2, where there were good players that not only told me that I wasn't good, but they also told me what I was doing wrong.

Fast forward to September 2011, and I'm seeing if I have what it takes to be a live pro.
Poker is Good for your health...I knew it :D Quote
09-23-2011 , 01:59 PM
Quote:
Originally Posted by Poker Clif
I appreciate your comment about my "great response". I spend more time in Beginner's Questions than anywhere else on 2+2. I consider my posts carefully, and often edit them after I read the finished product. I am always aware that more players than the one that I am responding to will be reading it, and I can't say enough about what posters in this thread have done for me.

The bolded part of your response is exactly correct. I'm new to live tournament play (well, new to taking it seriously at least). I had been playing a live tournament once every few months "for fun". I played my first serious live tournament last week and I was thrilled to get the final cashing spot (getting most of my buy-in back).

My expectation is to break even in my first 10 or so tournaments, because I'm learning a lot of the mechanics that I didn't have to worry about in online play, such as keeping track of pot size and bet and stack sizes, and all the stuff that I used to track with a HUD. Plus, I still have to learn about tells and a lot of other facets of live games. And on top of that, the charity rake is 20%, so I'm not going to get rich overnight playing these games!

In case anyone is wondering why I would pay the 20% charity rake, I do not live within 100 miles of a casino that holds poker touraments. Also, I'm carefully building a live bankroll, and driving 5 miles to a $20 "starter" charity tournament is a lot easier on the bankroll than driving 120 miles to play in a casino's $50-$100 lowest buy-in tournament.

I didn't expect to cash my first "serious" time out, and the only reason that I expect to break even after 10 tournaments is because the players are really bad (worse than an average $1 online STT) and the fields in the $20-$30 tournaments are small, usually 30 players or less, and small field size cuts the variance way down.

It's all about realistic expectations. I was hoping to cash in at least 3 of my first 10, so doing it the first time out was pretty exciting. And even though I have a massive edge against the field, I understand variance, and I would have been dissappointed, but not crushed, if I went 0 for 10.

You said it well. The "happiness" issue that you raised is all about proper expectation. It's easy to watch poker on TV and say, "I could do that." You're a killer at play money games, or you crush your favorite home game. You could be poker's next big thing!

It happened to me. I got a couple poker books from the library, and soon I was fake-cashing about half of the time against fields of thousands of players--at AOL World Series of Poker. I often went very deep, and there was a woman that seemed to always wind up at my table (more than once at the final table). So we kept telling each other how good we were, reinforcing our delusions. As we used to say when I was in 6th grade, I thought I was hot snot on a silver platter, but I was really cold boogers on a paper plate.

In 2006 I put $50 on PokerStars, and after three months of being slightly up, I lost it all. I had to admit to myself, and my wife, that I wasn't nearly as good as I had thought. But I kept at it, I kept studying, and I eventually found 2+2, where there were good players that not only told me that I wasn't good, but they also told me what I was doing wrong.

Fast forward to September 2011, and I'm seeing if I have what it takes to be a live pro.
Really enjoyable read, you write well. It's good to hear you've come so far and that you give back a lot of what you have learnt to the place that helped you to become the player you are.

I actually contacted the author of the Loss Aversion video - John Wray aka Jimmy Legs - on this issue. I think he gives a really good response, which you may be interested in reading:

"Hey Liam -

I must admit it's been almost a year since I thought much about or did research on the phenomenon, but I'll do my best to throw in my two cents.

I don't see any contradiction here, actually. The player in question is in the minority, as most players are losing or break-even players, even in tournaments. And an ROI of 14% is fantastic, so it makes perfect sense that this player is doing just fine in his life and fairly well adjusted. That probably goes for his winning friends, as well. But a long term break-even player is probably frustrated and grumpy, as is a small or moderate winner. I've been there myself, and it sucks.

But I think there's something else going on here as well, and I think it's an even more powerful explanation of his perspective on poker:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Exposure_therapy

Highlight quote: " The exposure therapist identifies the cognitions, emotions and physiological arousal that accompany a fear-inducing stimulus, and attempts to break the pattern of escape that strengthens the fear response, through measured exposure to progressively stronger stimuli until habituation is reached."

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Habituation

Highlight quote: "Habituation, a form of non-associative learning, is the psychological process in humans and other organisms in which there is a decrease in psychological and behavioral response to a stimulus after repeated exposure to that stimulus over a duration of time."

Ta da! Hardcore MTTers play so many games that they become desensitized and habituated to the ups and downs of poker. Loss Aversion can be overcome, and playing a bazillion tournaments has taught these players that the ups and downs are no big deal after all. But imagine how much different this player might feel if he only played one big buy-in tournament per week. He would probably put so much emotional energy into the results of that one tournament that he'd experience the need to avoid losing rather than win.

The trap that most of us fall into is that we invest too much of our happiness and ego in the results of any given session or tournament. But it's certainly a trap that can be overcome, and exposure to many many sessions or tournaments will do wonders for acclimatizing you to the stresses of variance.

I'd ask this MTTer how much different he feels about the game now than he did when he first started player poker. I imagine there's a world of difference in his perspective."
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09-23-2011 , 06:54 PM
Players that develop loss aversion just means that poker is not as bad for their health than it otherwise would be, not that poker is good for their health.
Poker is Good for your health...I knew it :D Quote
09-25-2011 , 04:19 AM
I don't think poker is good for our health, but for sure it's for the mind. Poker is a great mental exercise and helps us to improve our patience and to take things philosophically

Last edited by MapOfUrHead; 09-25-2011 at 04:25 AM.
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09-25-2011 , 12:09 PM
Quote:
Originally Posted by MapOfUrHead
take things philosophically
Can you explain how poker does this?
Poker is Good for your health...I knew it :D Quote
09-26-2011 , 03:05 AM
Quote:
Originally Posted by usernameslol
Can you explain how poker does this?
because of all the bad beats that go on from a day to day basis.
Poker is Good for your health...I knew it :D Quote
09-27-2011 , 05:54 PM
hey this is grand news indeed
Poker is Good for your health...I knew it :D Quote
09-28-2011 , 09:49 AM
Would be curious to know if this applied to playing poker live in casinos as well...
Poker is Good for your health...I knew it :D Quote
10-13-2011 , 01:49 PM
life is unhealthy. i m not sure about poker, i guess it has positives and negatives. the adrenaline it gives will suppress minor pain and enable you to do endure more pain without caring too much. e.g. i was training a lot more and harder when i was playing poker, i m more self-confident when playing poker and i have a stronger libido. the problem is that the stress i feel is not going away over time. i feel stressed at the start of sessions, i feel relaxed within, towards the end and after the sessions but then the stress will build up again as i feel i m not playing enough.
Poker is Good for your health...I knew it :D Quote
10-14-2011 , 07:26 AM
Lol.
In my experience laying in a hammock on a sunny afternoon while listening to Bob Marley is good for releasing stress. Not poker.
Poker is Good for your health...I knew it :D Quote
10-16-2011 , 02:35 PM
Ive always found life to relieve poker stress, not the other way around.
Poker is Good for your health...I knew it :D Quote
10-28-2011 , 04:42 AM
Poker is fantastic for your mind... but it can take a toll on your body. I think that, just like anybody who engages in any dangerous sport, pursuit or profession, poker players need to take steps to minimize the danger to their bodies. Just like a mountain climber who locks securely into the wall with a rope for safety, poker players need to be aware of the health hazards of poker and deal with them correctly.

Last edited by AntonDrake; 10-28-2011 at 04:48 AM.
Poker is Good for your health...I knew it :D Quote
10-28-2011 , 05:38 AM
Quote:
Originally Posted by Heisenberg1
Well said!

Im still playing poker because of the money issue despite the negative side effects. I have been searching for some medicine that might would take out this cortisol and adrenaline production ****. Beta blockers seem to help a bit, but since the body still produces these stress hormones though im not "responding" to them i am not sure it´s the right way to go.

Any thoughts here? Are there any medicine or thinking that might help?
Heisenberg, yeah, there is some more info about this on the poker-isometrics.com website. There are a few ideas there that you might find interesting. Nick Christensen recently reviewed the book for twoplustwo magazine, and I've been getting a lot of really good feedback on this.

To me, it seems that the usually recommended formula for reducing stress at the poker table runs somewhat along the lines of a "re-framing" strategy; players are encouraged to dissociate somewhat from immediate results and gameplay situations, and are advised to make decisions as objectively as possible while focusing on longterm expectation. If you just make good decisions, you'll be getting the best of it in the long run; variance is to be expected; therefore, just remove frustration and emotional reactions from your game.

The problem is that concepts like "money" and "winning" and "losing" seem to be very linked-in to our brains at a low level; some people might describe this as a more reptilian or survival oriented part of ourselves. Regardless, the point is that emotional responses are physical in nature (I would highly recommend Joseph Ledoux's book "The Emotional Brain" for a much deeper look at this subject). Of course, endeavoring to stay detached, and making a conscious effort to "let go" and not dwell on stressful, frustrating events does help, but sometimes the stress is just ongoing in real-time.

If something suspenseful, or punishing, or pressurized is occurring, almost by definition it is triggering your fight or flight response on some level. Ideally you can channel the energy from that constructively, but if you're engaged in a particularly sedentary activity (like casino poker, where some players sit as still as church mice with impassive faces for countless hours) then a lot of that physical energy, in the form of hormones etc, etc, is totally unused. Thinking or re-framing your idea of what is going on is always fighting an uphill battle against actual stress--which is where Poker Isometrics comes in. Consider the fact that nobody has a chronic stress issue when they are out there cutting down trees or swimming the English channel; right? Using isometrics is one way to "unleash" your body at the poker table, while still remaining socially acceptable and in the flow of the game. Good breathing also helps... actually if you were really diligent about breathing correctly that would make a huge difference. And of course, eating right, and trying to get some exercise (or sexercise) away from the table.

I generally avoid drugs and medications as much as possible. Something like beta-blockers... in my view, you're always better off if you can avoid having to depend on something external in your life, especially at such a fundamental level.
Poker is Good for your health...I knew it :D Quote
11-02-2011 , 06:04 AM
Quote:
Originally Posted by BadAtMeth
Okay. This is one of two things:

1) A fictional study invented by affiliates who want to help problem gamblers justify losing more money. Or,

2) A study (or a mashup of many studies) taken way out of context.

If 1, then wow -- disgusting.

If 2, then wow -- irresponsible. I found research out of McGill claiming that gambling functions as a maladaptive coping mechanism for anxious, stressed, or depressed people. This works towards explaining gambling addiction and pathological gambling. What it does not do is suggest that online gaming is 'healthy' for you. It may 'reduce stress' in the extreme short term, yes; but that does not mean it is beneficial long-term or healthy for you.

And the only cortisol/gaming link I could find out of McGill was this write-up of a study. The experimenters designed a happy-face clicking game and measured cortisol levels of participants while playing.



Maybe somebody can google better than I can and find this study. I would love to be wrong on this one.
I like the way you think Meth. Empirical evidence only please people, your anecdotal accounts of what makes you feel good and what doesn't prove nothing.

Has anyone found this report anywhere? I can have a look on scopus or psyc info but it would help to know either the name of the paper or the name of the researchers.
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