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Poker Forums / The Rail / Re: Toby Lewis: Final PokerStars Snowfest
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on: December 22, 2012, 01:16:41 PM
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Toby finished 3rd
KK in the small blind slap bang into AA in the big
The second placed finisher won into the event by playing an online sat on his mobile whilst watching Skyfall at the Movies.
Apparently he has won entry into Deauville while out for dinner with his girlfriend. Girlfriend quoted as saying "it was lovely, he spoke to me during the sync breaks and even used his time bank to ask how my food was. He's a real romantic" haha
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Poker Forums / Diaries and Blogs / Re: Prose from a Poshboy
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on: December 14, 2012, 01:27:00 AM
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This is a brutal comedown. A few hours ago I was within 90 players of a million dollars. The equity of my stack was worth over 50 thousand euros. Then on the turn of one card, it was all but over and a few hours later I'm sitting on a train, sharing a compartment with a stranger, on an uncomfortable bed that I've had to make myself!
I kind of expected this trip to be a make or break trip. Not break in that it'd break me, but I was putting quite a lot of funds into what was essential a handful of tournaments, so bricking everything and PJ bricking everything, would've been pretty bad and may've required a step down in stakes for 2013. But the upsides were sure to be worth the risk! Think what could've been if I hold with aces...
But the most likely result, is what has happened. A sweat or two, no big bink, but leaving a small winner. By the most likely, I mean, my expected long term value from the trip, was to be a small winner, rather than a big loser or big winner. But you still approach it thinking "I could easily brick everything" OR "I could win the world".
So I've not left a broken man who never wants to play again, searching his soul for what to do with himself. And nor have I left a millionaire. So the dream is still there, yet to be fulfilled and now I'm looking to the next stop, the next chance for that big score. The game still has me by the balls.
The guy sharing my cabin is a young Brazilian, travelling around Europe on his own. From my own travelling experiences, I reckon this cabin is the height of luxury to him! I've slept many a night in far worse places. I've slept in £1.50 hotels in Africa with rooms smaller than prison cells and beds like a slab of wood, ants crawling about and the odd scorpion.
My room in the jungle in Peru for 2 months had countless bugs and insects in, even a tarantula found its way into my bag once. During our tour of South America we cut our stay in Rio short because the hotels were so expensive. We paid £9 a night. For the record, I'm not saying that I know what it's like to be poor in real terms, I don't - I've been extremely fortunate throughout my life, I'm just saying I remember how tight things were in that year, and how highly I valued small amounts of money.
How things have changed! Now a hotel room for £30 a night each is a bargain and we snub anything budget or "cheap". Winning one or two hundred quid in a night is fobbed off as being a "bowl" and anything +/- £500 feels like a breakeven day now.
What I profited this trip I referred to earlier as a "small profit". If I stepped back and stopped being so spoilt, I'd realise that it is a massive amount to win in 12days. People take months to earn it, and I'm leaving thinking that it's a bowl of rice, and I could've had so much more.
I think I need reality checks sometimes. The amounts of money that fly around the poker world are ridiculous. And we're not exactly the most baller people in the community either. In these circles of EPTs and high stakes cash games, we're actually pretty little fish. Brammer said he'd jump off a bridge if he came 9th in the EPT today. That would be a 60k pay day. They discuss tens of thousands like we discuss thousands, and smaller stakes players discuss hundreds, and muggles discuss tenners!
I don't think these things are too important though in themselves, and being hard on yourself or feeling guilty for being lavish with money is pretty futile and unnecessary. Money is the tool with which we do our job. So we are used to big sums being thrown about. But when you're wasteful with money, that's what I hate. And I think it's important to hate it, because it shows you know the value of it.
I think people in this world can go off the rails extremely easily if they're not careful. Spending time with family or non-poker friends is very important to keep your feet on the ground. Listen to how they talk about and treat money, then when you're going to flick in a £200 spin on roulette, remember what that money can buy in real life and walk away.
This is advice to myself as much as anything, and to anyone that wants to listen.
great post
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