The bad guys had a man on third and he looked surly. He looked jumpy. The scoredboard had a giant zero in the "outs" column and the baserunner on the hot corner looked ready to exploit someone.
When the ball exploded off the bat in a parabola of sure doom, the baserunner saw what I didn't. He knew the ball wouldn't make it over the fence. The bad guy slipped back onto the bag and waited. This is where he would exploit someone. He'd exploit the centerfielder's weak arm.
From our spot behind home, we couldn't hear the ball hit the leather glove in centerfield, but we did hear the slight huff of the baserunner's breath as he broke from his spot on third base.
I watched as the centerfielder summoned some sort of masculinity from his jock strap and put the ball on a frozen-rope bee-line for home plate.
As the ball crossed over the second baseman's head, I screamed, "He's got'em!"
I stood, nearly spilling my beer, and waited for the inevitability.
The bad guy slid into the catchers glove, the same glove that held the ball that milliseconds before had been more than 300 feet away.
"Hwah!" I joined the small crowd in cheering the first exciting thing that had happened in four innings. Then I looked down at my sleeping kid. He didn't stir from his kid-coma.
"That's alright, kid," I thought. "I'll tell ya about it someday."
***
A few days ago, I took my kid to his first ball game. It was minor league ball. It was a team that is leaving town to go to, of all places, Mississippi. But it was a ballgame.
What's more, it was a moment. And I like moments. I live for them, for, often, they teach me more than full scale experiences.
As such, I'm learning.
I'm learning slowly that life as a father is a practice in accepting chopped pots. Sometimes you get the whole thing, sometimes you lose it all, and sometimes you chop and should be happy about it.
But, it's hard to remember that sometimes. When you're 30 years old and have spent three decadeson a self-important, egocentric, me-me-me kick, the transition to being the only way a kid will stay alive is a tough proposition. Deep down, there's a part of you that remembers the old days, those days when you could stand up, walk out of the house, and go wherever you want; the days that the only bad thing about getting drunk was a hangover and disapproving look from the wife; the days when as long as you gave the wife a kiss once a day, you were doing your job.
And now, every priority is different.
But, then, you fathers know that, don't you?
***
"He's got the hammer."
The words popped up in the chat bar, an ethereal nod to the poker world I know. It was a friendly screen name in a pond of anonymous sharks. I'd slayed these sharks many times before, but in recent days I'd felt like chum.
A defense mechanism I keep in in a pocket change purse had been humming a mantra, "It's variance, Otis. It's variance." But I knew it wasn't true. Variance doesn't turn good players into chum.
It left me with two options:
1) Something had happened to my game.
2) I've been very lucky in the past year.
It was about that time the room, for a few seconds blessedly silent, erupted into a scream.
Just as I had bought into the SNG, the new addition to Mt. Otis had started to cry. I thought he'd be alseep for the hour and fifteen minutes it would take me to play the ten-person tourney. As I have been many times in the past three weeks, I was wrong.
When I set out to write this post, I thought I was ready to quit the game. Fatherhood and mid-level poker play just don't mix.
However, I'm not sure that's the answer.
And, frankly, though I usually am fairly sure of myself, I'm at a loss for whether I can be a good dad and and poker player at the same time.
And as much as I want to write about this subject, I just can't get past the idea that even considering a corolation between fatherhood and poker amounts to me being a poor father. That is, a good father just would stop playing for the next 20 years.
And, frankly, I just don't want to be introspective about my qualifications as a father. That may cut a little deep.
Frankly, I'm not doing much of anything very well. My multitasking skills have fallen apart. It's resulted in no small amount of paranoia. For instance, take this snippet from a recent entry in my other blog
Buzzwords are the bastard sons of the catch phrase.Perhaps if it weren't for the invention of the computer, we'd have never heard the word "multitasking." That is, after all, what computers do. They multitask.
But, sometime in the last ten years, some marketing genius decided it might be fun to assign "multitasking" to human processes. Screw that guy.
Methinks there was a larger Dr. Phil-ish conspiracy afoot. That is, if we can convince people they should be able to act like computers, then we can sell them more books teaching them how to act like computers. Then, when they fail at that task (one of several the multitasking propoganda machine prescribes), we can sell them books on how to overcome the depression of failing to multitask. Then when they fail at overcoming their depression we can sell them prescription drugs that make them forget about how they couldn't multitask. Then once they get addicted to those drugs we can sell them books on overcoming addiction. Once they overcome addiction, they'll realize they should be multitasking and buy a book on how to do it more effectively.
The fact that I'm suffering at work, suffering at play, and suffering at poker at the same time lead me to believe that Mt. Willis is in a transition phase. During that phase, I should likely protect myself and my bankroll and play less frequently and only at times when I'm sure I won't be interupted.
I need a plan. And since I rarely stick to plans if I'm the only one that knows about them, I'm going to lay out a few guidelines for poker play for the next thirty days.
1) No tournaments unless I am guaranteed the ability to play the full tourney without distraction (that is, the house is empty except for me, the dog, and cold drink).
2) Ring games will be allowed, but only during times when Mrs. Otis has banished me from the room for some Otis Time and won't need my help (we've been sharing kid duty and occasionally banish each other when it looks like it's necessary).
3) Stop believing that I have to play every day to stay fresh.
4) Use Otis Time to find some real humans who want to play cards. I think I may venture back toward The Mark soon. I need interaction that involves more than chatbars.
So, that's the 30-day plan. We'll re-evaluate on October 8th.
***
A thought for the day: If rocket scientisits can plan for months and months to collect space atoms in a funky space fridge, employ Hollywood stuntmen in helicopters to snag it from its space fall, then watch the fridge crash into the desert at a cost of hundreds of millions of dollars that we'll never get back, should I really be too upset for myself for misplaying the Hilton Sisters a few weeks ago?
Hey man, cool post. Fear not, the only thing more life changing than your first child is having your second. :)
It does get better, trust me. It may get a bit worse first - all babies are different - but it will get bettter.
I confess to thinking about faking my own death and moving to South America when my kids were 3.5 and 1.5 and I was taking two classes at night for my MBA. Such pain, such pain....
But I (we - couldn't have done it w/out the wife) made it and you will too.
But what I really wanted to get through to you in this post was to INVITE ME TO THE MARK!!! :)
Posted by: BadBlood at September 8, 2004 11:07 PMthere's nothing funnier than watching the horror on the face of all those nasa scientists when they realize that the parachute isn't gonna open ... well more tragic than funny, but still.
the curse of multitasking: why be good at one thing when you can suck at three?
Posted by: NemoD at September 9, 2004 4:36 AMI'm feeling you, man. Take comfort, though, that you can certainly be a "new" father and a poker player. Fatherhood definitely cuts into the available time and you just have to accept that. I have found that it is possible to catch up on my reading when handling a fussy baby. My son's first words may even be "flop, turn, river" I've read so much of my poker library out loud to him while he's settling down to sleep. I think he definitely prefers Sklansky to Caro, though. :)
Posted by: VARoadstter at September 9, 2004 10:04 AMSNG's + babies = bad idea.
I can attest to this.
There's nothing funnier than trying to play 3 SNG's down to the bubble or in the money while simultaneously trying to get the baby back to sleep and not wake the wife.
I'd stick to the ring games until the little one ges some consistency...and that could be a while.
Posted by: Poker Nerd at September 9, 2004 2:24 PMJust wait 12 years until your 8th grade son fills in for you on the super monday tourny @ PP while you have to pick up your daughter from music practice. When I get back he has doubled my stack and is all-in with KK. We double up again and have a significant lead on our table. He tells me he needs to finnish his homework and he wants me to try not to screw it up until he can get back. He returns 45 minutes later to see me bust out on a terrible call with ATo. He looks at me says "idiot" and walks back out of the room. A true comedy classic. I laughed pretty hard on that one. Almost worth the 162 entry. Poker is a game for fathers and sons and dont let anybody tell you different. Good Luck
Posted by: rmwaddle at September 9, 2004 2:29 PMWow. What an awesome post. Don't get too frustrated Otis, you obviously do a FEW things well. I absolutely HATE baseball and that intro was awesome.
Posted by: JW at September 9, 2004 2:53 PMOtis, great post my man... basbeall, fatherhood, Party Poker... and a random Hilton Sisters reference. You rock.
Posted by: Pauly at September 9, 2004 3:05 PMDear Otis,
I enjoy your poker blog. As a father of a 2 1/2 year old, I can tell you that you do not need to give up poker and that it sounds like from your blog you have a good plan in place.
I found that up until the kid sleeps the whole night through I would avoid playing SNGs or Tourneys that cost more than $5-$10, that way if I had to put it in "post & fold" mode to take care of the kid I did not feel that I lost much money (actually it probably saved me money as the "post & fold" played better than me!)
Now my daughter likes to sit in my lap while I'm at the computer and help me play "Pokah" while I read one of her favorite books. Heck she even likes to watch the poker shows with me. She is smarter than me so I'm hoping she picks up all my poker books when she is older and starts supporting her dad when she wins the WSOP.
Congrads again on the kid, keep up the blogging and don't worry you won't have to give up poker.
I play as Sticker99 on most sites, hope to see you at the tables.
Kevin
Posted by: Kevin at September 10, 2004 4:13 PMtruly an awesome post as the above comments attest to. for the love of god, i thought for a second there it was gonna be a 'i'm not poker blogging anymore' post and i was preparing to rend my garments and wail.
whew.
i think, err hope, you'll find a happy balance with fatherhood and poker. just eliminate those damn sngs. :)
Posted by: iggy at September 11, 2004 2:43 PMI have a 13 month old son and have had to change my online habits as well. I used to be a "powergamer" playing online games (not poker) for 6-7 hours a night.
Poker has been a blessing, hit a button and don't get dealt in. I get to choose when I play, so I make sure its only when the little guy is sleeping or not at home. Time with the wife is a different story, and I don't think I'll ever figure that one out :P
Hope things work out for you Otis.
Posted by: Drizztdj at September 14, 2004 12:13 PM