Quote:
Originally Posted by wazz
in a vacuum, we're supposed to play every hand for the maximum ev. in practice, when we account for real human fallibilities, we can't hold ourself to that standard.
while variance accounts for most of our results, especially live, our skill can still have a strong input, so it's natural to conclude after firing 3 great bluffs that got called that we're playing bad, and so to be a bit more careful. the fact that our bluffs all got called suggests they weren't as good as we might think. when in doubt about how well we're playing it pays to be over rather than under-cautious.
conversely, if we can see we're playing well, we should be prone to pick up on those fine instincts. these are both valid responses to being up or down.
what's less valid is to look at how much we're winning or losing and allow that to affect our mindset. being down 9 buyins doesn't mean we're now playing to turn that 1 buyin back into 10. make a point of noticing when you do either of those things, and remind yourself of the correct attitude.
i prefer to consciously moderate my playing style according to stack size and table conditions. if i feel an impulse to make a tight fold or loose call based on whether i'm winning or losing, i immediately question that and get back to what i consider the better play in a vacuum.
in the longer run, if you can feel you're not playing great in general, or are more prone to tilt, it pays to lock down a little - tighten up, take far fewer high variance spots, etc.
Good points, thx for that
Few remarks:
I actually do realize when it happens (which I consider a good thing), but then sometimes I do it anyways… which is what pisses me off.
I mean, we are not talking about huge blunders here, I’m a winning player for a long time now, but games are getting harder, people are getting better, so every small edge counts obviously
Also:
I worked a lot on the mental side of the game, so being up or down in a session should be really irrelevant… but of course I’m aware of it, and when I do a session review I see it influences me (not a lot, as I said, no big blunders) but definitely measurable