Showing posts with label selective amnesia. Show all posts
Showing posts with label selective amnesia. Show all posts

Tuesday, June 7, 2011

Selective amnesia

My memory of last night's session is that my stack descended to the felt on a fairly smooth trajectory. Looking at the bar chart of my stack size over the course of the night, though, I can clearly see that my memory is faulty. My stack took a huge hit about a quarter of the way through the session, and I can't remember why. It's likely a case of selective amnesia; my pride was hurt, so by not remembering the details, I'm protecting my ego. However, that won't do; I need to study the details so that I can avoid making the same type of mistake in the future. So let me delve into the hand history ...

Ah yes, I remember now. I was dealt a king queen offsuit, and the flop came Kc 4h 5c. I believed I had the best hand, called a big all in reraise before the turn, and lost a pot worth $76,500 ($31,300 of it my money) to a set of fours. I should have had the discipline to fold when the big reraise was made.

I realize that I'm playing too loose these days, and really need to tighten up. Thinking back over past vicissitudes, I can see a pattern - when I'm running really hot, I start thinking I'm Superman, loosen up too much, and get my head handed to me on a platter.

It turns out that the last two sessions are the second worst back to back losses in my poker career. Strangely enough, that cheers me up; I like setting (or nearly setting) records, even negative ones!

During current Hold'em session you were dealt 68 hands and saw flop:
- 9 out of 13 times while in big blind (69%)
- 10 out of 13 times while in small blind (76%)
- 23 out of 42 times in other positions (54%)
- a total of 42 out of 68 (61%)
Pots won at showdown - 5 of 9 (55%)
Pots won without showdown - 8

delta: $-40,000
balance: $1,689,167