OK, here are two situations where I hold the same hand and on both occasions I get it all in on the flop, for different reasons. Did I do the right thing?
Hand AA maniac opens for £4 UTG in a 7 handed 50p/£1 game. He could literally have any two cards. He has chips in front of him now but he has called off and bluffed off at least £300 before now.
I am in MP and the guy to my right calls the £4. He has had his KK cracked by the maniac the previous hand and has bought in for £40 and is clearly pissed off.
I have

, a £100 stack, and decide that the maniac (who has me covered) probably has sod all and that when he calls the guy to my right will shove in his last £40 on tilt and I can re-raise to get rid of the maniac.
I re-raise £12 in an attempt to achieve this scenario. I don't want to re-raise too much, as every time I have done this the maniac has seen sense and folded. Anyway, the maniac calls as expected, but the guy to my right, who clearly doesn't see a good spot with his short stack just calls, leaving him with only £28 behind.
Flop is

Maniac leads out for £12. I am starting to ponder whether he would do this with a five when my chain of thought is interrupted by the guy to my right shoving in his £28. He is probably on a draw or has some kind of King. Maybe he has the 5 but the maniac is more likely to have this. The favourite is the draw. This puts me in an awkward spot however as flatting achieves very little, folding is out of the question and if I raise I will probably have to call a maniac shove.
I decide for better or worse that I have to price out the big draw in case I have it wrong and it is the maniac who has the flush draw, although it is unlikely.
I find myself in a way ahead or way behind scenario and even though I saw the flop in position, the shortie shove has now forced me, I feel at the time, to either commit my stack or pass. I do shove and the maniac calls with

, although as he does it he seems to think I have kings full.
Hand BThis time I am in the small blind with

. An utg fish raises to £4. Barry Neville flats in the cutoff. Button passes and I re-pop to £20. Barry comments that this a bit steep, to which I hint that my crap position has a lot to do with it.
Fish calls which I wasn't really expecting and now so does Barry, muttering that he has the odds to call. This is debatable however as I have earlier seen him call on the river in a four way pot, capping the action, to hit a gutshot when he was being offered no better than 5 to 1. Anyway, I digress.
Flop is

Not the best flop. I am in horrid position. There is £60 in the pot and I only have around £90 left. Both of the others have me covered (just). My SPR is 1.5. I start to think what I will do if I bet and get check raised. I will probably commit. If I check and someone leads I will probably check raise. Because I don't have the benefit of position, again, it is commit now or check/pass and I elect to commit. I have a hard time putting Barry on JJ or TT as we were short handed preflop and my £20 looks a lot like AK and I feel he would go with it there and then. I think it more likely he has a smaller pocket pair or suited connectors. I don't know what the fish has but he sees every single flop so it could be seven deuce for all I know.
If anyone has JJ, TT, 88 or J,10 then I have been unlucky I say to myself. With the SPR so low I decide to bang it in and price out the flush and straight draws.
It turns out Barry has JJ and the fish doesn't show, and neither do I when the turn and river blank. I feel Barry's call for £20 is very optimistic even if he says he knows for a fact I had aces or kings. Implied odds just didn't exist as we both had around £120 to start the hand. Anyway, that was not the point of my post.
I have to admit the caveat to my opening question is this:
My thinking has probably been clouded by the fact that I have just finished, a few days before, the book by Ed Miller, Sunny Mehta and some other chap whose name excapes me, called Professional No Limit Hold'em Volume 1, and this book's core subject is stack to pot ratio and how it affects your decision making process post flop.
After these two hands a similar situation came up a day or two later, after I had re-read the book, where I committed post flop with KK on a draw heavy flop but this time I took it down as I actually was up against the big draw rather than the made hand.
I should perhaps add that up to this point I have been running worse than Usain Bolt with a broken leg and that is my lame excuse for any poor play. What I want to do is analyse after the hands whether my thinking was cloudy, downright wrong, or polluted by the downswing I have been enduring.
So, am I looking at results too much, or did reading this book cloud my judgement the next day?