Thursday morning, my day off now that I work the weekend shift, I was up at 7:00 for the drive to my older daughter's school. I got to bed at 2:00 the night before and lay awake until 6. I'm not sleeping well lately. Some nights I try to lie down early but get caught up in mental conspiracy. Most nights I spend the last few hours before the alarm sounds stealing glances at the clock and counting backwards the hours 'till work. Wednesday night I counted the hours until "Doughnuts for Dads."
We chased Krispy Kreme with OJ in the school library, sitting with a girl from my daughter's class and her father. I introduced myself to the other exhausted, and ponytailed, dad. He pointed to the letters written in black ink, probably drawn from a ballpoint pen, and said, "Call me Taz."
It seems his daughter is the girl who matches mine in both good grades and poor discipline. Actually, my daughter is incredibly kind, honest, considerate and loyal. She's just a little too energetic. One night, as we got her ready for bed, she started crying about her own bad behavior. "I want to be good," she whined, "I don't know why I'm squirmy."
That kept me up late too.
It's probably true that we wouldn't feel the rush of a win without the pain of a loss. This summer I took an unbelievable heater for granted. By September, when I returned from Vegas, I often told Blood I could probably make a living off of poker. At the time, it was true. I was more successful as a poker player than as a journalist this year.
In the middle of the month, things began to change. I took a tough loss playing $2-$5 NL, dropping two buy-ins. Then, two days later, I dropped 6... yes 6... buy-ins playing $1-$2 NL at Gucci Rick's. Then, after 2 losing sessions at the Spring Hotel, I went from overly confident to outright depressed. I wrote this to my local poker cabal:
"Last night, when I got home, I deleted all the poker software from my laptop.
It will be some time before I play poker again.
I suck.
I quit."
That's right folks, I'm a very emotional boy. Luckily I have good friends to talk me through. Here's the response from BadBlood:
"You know, rather than the brute force method of describing your current
mindset, I would honestly be interested in the psychology of how you feel now vs. how you felt when you were running so hot. The reason being is that we ALL go through those same ups and downs. Mark was about to quit, got a bit hot, and stopped whining. I won't even go into the times when I did my best impersonation of a sandy vaj.
Seriously, it's amazing to me how we can go from one extreme to the next in this game. Mastering the psychology of those swings is the secret. And now you have a chance to work out of your funk somehow. And when you do, it would be enlightening to hear what you did and why you did it."
And here's what Otis said:
"G-Rob has done what G-Rob does. He advances far faster at everything he does than most people. He just hit that spot that everybody hits. The end of a heater is a terrible thing to endure. I know this very well. In fact, I'm still dealing with it."
G-Rob, you know you're an emotional guy. Your highs are high and your lows are are deep, deep lows. You went on a heater that we all envied. When a heater ends, it is everybody's first instinct to try to revive it. Even though we think we're playing our same game, we aren't. There is some undefinable element that changes. More often than not, it's a combination of diminished confidence mixed with latent desperation to get it all back. To be fair, you know you don't suck. Your reading abilities are better than most people. Your NL game is insanely good and I'm mad I ever invited you to play in the first place. I think you know your rush was a combination of your superior play combined with a little bit of good luck. The luck has turned around a little bit. That doesn't change your knowledge of the game. You do, indeed, need to take a break. It doesn't have to be defined. Just sit back for a few days and enjoy something else. That's harder than it sounds, because common sense tells you that the sooner you turn it around, the sooner you can get back to killing the games. One thing I've been telling myself recently is something Blood reminded me of about six months ago: There is no hurry. Think about it. One year ago, your game wasn't as good and you had very little roll to speak of. In a very short amount of time, you built a huge roll and were able to do a lot of cool things with it.
TheMark was in the loop with all these e-mails an the like. He don't rite gud tho.
REPORTS
My oldest daughter has one great problem that she'll always struggle with, her emotional wiring is identical to mine. I'm incredibly proud of her, of course, but even I am stumped with how to help. We got her school progress report last week and she made all A's... again. She's never made anything else. The report also cane with a note from the teacher, that her behavior is a problem.
Then last night she brought home another note from the teacher, she'd been in trouble for talking in class. It's the 6th such note in the past 4 days. We sent her to her room for the night after dinner and she, of course, threw a fit. The problem is, as bad as she acts at times, she's not a bad girl.
The last thing I want is for her to have that impression, that people think she's "BAD." That's a hard label to overcome and, believe me, I know. She's the kind of girl who won't accept a candy at the doctor's office unless they'll give her an extra to bring home to her sister. She is so responsible around the house that, at times, we can forget that she's only 7 years old. Still, I know she's perpetually upset about the trouble at school. I'm not sure how to help.
On those nights when I lie awake, I think about 3 things:
How can I help my daugher stop acting like I always did?
How can I move ahead with my career and keep providing for my family?
Why do I still suck at poker?
The third seems awfully trivial by comparison, but I'm finding the solutions can be awfully similar in the end.
That, and I've been taking NyQuil this week.
THE MOVES
I think I'd gotten too clever at poker. I started to think, after MONTHS of big wins, that every move I tried would work... as if all other players were too stupid to match wits with me.
Then, when I started losing, I got frustrated that those moves weren't working and tried to be ever more clever. It blew up in my face.
Monday, at Gucci Rick's I stripped it all back down and played almost beginner level ABC poker. I won 2 buy-ins. Not big, but it felt awfully good.
As for my daughter, I'm not convinced simply sending her to her room is the right play either. It never worked for me. In fact, as my parents grew constantly more frustrated with me, that was always their response until, totally exasperated, I think they felt almost powerless.
I plan to use my friends' advice.
The brute force method of a nasty funk will not work. Instead it will reinforce our failures. I need to understand the psychology of my own shortcomings before I can help my daughter. Blood was right.
And as Otis says, there is no hurry. I don't want to overreact to every note home, or allow their collective weight to become a crisis. There is time to help my daughter learn self control and I don't want my solution to cause more damage.
For a week or two that's what happened to my poker game.
I can't let it happen with something... important.
nh
Posted by: Daddy at September 27, 2006 3:11 PMCould it be that Older Daughter is bored to tears in school and that is leading to her behavior problems? Some times, we need a good challenge to stay engaged. Maybe you could talk to the school about finding ways to challenge her before finding ways to discipline her.
Posted by: Mrs. Otis at September 27, 2006 3:25 PMWow you might suck at poker but that was one hell of a great post. All I can say is I am TOTALLY the same way with POKER. We tend to chase the emotion of the last thing we did. I could win a 20K FTP MTT and the next day feel like I suck for losing some shitty game. It can be good and bad.
It is funny to hear about your daughter too.. my son is that way. Good kid. Wired though. His teacher actually calls him Mr. Trump.. and says "You do not tell Mr. Trump what to do, you bargin with him and hope to get something out of it".
Anyway.. thanks for sharing and it was fun playing with you last night.
Posted by: sirfwalgman at September 27, 2006 4:22 PMSee, that should calm you down, GRob.
You're just like Waffles.
Posted by: CJ at September 27, 2006 4:54 PMOne night, as we got her ready for bed, she started crying about her own bad behavior. "I want to be good," she whined, "I don't know why I'm squirmy."
This sounds like me in school and my parents had me tested for Attention Defecit Disorder when I was in the third grade. The words "a lock for a positive result" come to mind.
Mrs. Otis is correct that your daughter could be bored as hell with school. You're also correct that sending her to her room won't solve the problem. If nothing else, talk to your daughter about why she does what she does. See if she can explain it. If nothing else, that will cause her to focus on her behavior and help her figure out what makes her tick.
Posted by: Pokerwolf at September 28, 2006 7:47 AMI really enjoyed the post.
I know that when I was in elementary school I got good grades, but I was also in trouble a lot for just talking at the wrong times. In my case it wasn't ADD or any real problems, I just REALLY liked to talk and had perhaps a tad less self-control than my classmates. Take this from some intraweb nobody you've never heard of before, but I'd say that if she is getting good grades it's probably not a learning problem, and if she is not really acting out it is not a problem being bored. It's easy as a parent to want to find some problem or label to understand it better, but probably she's just a kid and will grow out of it in 10 or 20 years. I like Pokerwolf's suggestion about asking her why it's a problem for her, if for nothing else to reinforce that type of self-awareness and problem-solving.
My only live poker recently (last several months) has been a weekly home game with friends. In 13-14 weeks of play I had my second losing session last weekend and I totally felt like I was something not worthy to coat the bottom of a trashcan. What is that about? Made me more tentative in my online play too. Stupid self-reinforcing behavior patterns....grumble.
Posted by: Ironcynic at September 28, 2006 10:11 AMNever fear G-Rob, I still think you suck.
Except at poker, being a parent, and your writing.
I went on a five month skid, but have won for the past three.
Did I change anything? Absolutely.
But the thing I changed wasn't how to play AK from middle position at a tight table with a raise behind.
It was my attitude towards the game. I stopped caring about the outcome, and cared more about whether I played the hand "correctly". Also, recognized more that I am in fact gambling despite giving myself as many +EV chances as possible.
I think once a player can come to terms that he/she can't make the cards come out in their favor despite giving themselves the best chance to win, its a step towards becoming a great player.
Posted by: Drizztdj at September 28, 2006 11:11 AMI blame sugar and caffeine for my swings,
yeah, that's the ticket...
G-Rob,
First, always listen to Mrs. Otis.
Second, great post.
Third, maybe they have GATE at her school (Gifted And Talented Educational). I always got in trouble in school...not sure why...but what I can say is that your baby girl is still a kid...I think kids talk and get wild a bit...or did we forget about you falling to your knees in Vegas after losing another spin bet. Seems like she is very mature in other aspects such as house chores. Let her be a kid and always be in her corner...I say fuck authority...Long Live Little Female G-Rob!!!
Posted by: joaquinochoa at September 28, 2006 2:44 PMThis was really gripping. As the father of a gifted 4 year-old, I can relate to the description of your daughter. There are a lot of really good books on raising gifted children, and the behaviour you've described sounds a lot more like a gifted child than one with ADD. I agree wholeheartedly that it's more important to avoid crushing the spirit than to stop the letters home.
GL.
Posted by: Iakaris at September 29, 2006 11:56 AMWow, we get down on ourselves. It seems like when things go wrong they really spiral.
I think the hardest part of being a parent, is that we are told we it is the best thing in life. Well, it isn't. For the most part it is. I will protect and teach my kids to the end. Then again, when my kid throws a tantrum and I handle it, I worry that I said the wrong thing or did the wrong thing. Next thing I know my kid is wearing baggy jeans, talking about his bi$%hs and ho's, with his meth pipe in his pocket on work release.
That is probably why I beat myself up so bad. I just fear everything I do is going to have some long lasting effect.
At least you can relate to your daughter. That is such a good thing. My son is high strung has a temper and will fly off the handle in a second. I am not like that at all. I was an only child, I preferred to be by myself. He wants my attention all the time.
As far as poker goes, swings stink. Everyone who plays poker goes through it. Take the smallest wins and feel good about them. I even got to the point, where I was thinking, wow I played that one well, I could have lost much more.
Posted by: WayneBullet at September 30, 2006 12:50 PM