N
Natiq 90
Enthusiast
Silver Level
- Joined
- Mar 6, 2021
- Total posts
- 33
- Awards
- 1
- Poker Chips
- 63
- Casino Coins
- 0
- #1
I've been thinking about this for a while and wanted to hear other people's experiences.
We talk a lot about strategy, hand ranges, bankroll management. But rarely about the deeper shift that happens inside you after playing poker seriously for a while.
For me, poker didn't just teach me how to play cards. It changed how I think in real life.
I started seeing decisions differently. Not as right or wrong, but as good process or bad process. You can make the perfect decision and still get a bad outcome. You can make a terrible decision and get rewarded. Poker teaches you to separate the two — and once you learn that, you start applying it everywhere. Business decisions, relationships, daily life.
I became more comfortable with uncertainty. Before poker, I needed to know how things would turn out before committing. Poker cured me of that. You never know how it turns out. You just make the best decision with the information you have.
I also became more patient. Not just at the table — but in life. Waiting for the right moment instead of forcing things.
So my question to you all: was there a specific moment when you realized poker was changing not just your game — but your mindset? A hand, a session, a downswing that taught you something about yourself you didn't expect?
I genuinely believe poker is one of the best teachers of emotional intelligence and decision-making that exists. But I'd love to hear your stories.
We talk a lot about strategy, hand ranges, bankroll management. But rarely about the deeper shift that happens inside you after playing poker seriously for a while.
For me, poker didn't just teach me how to play cards. It changed how I think in real life.
I started seeing decisions differently. Not as right or wrong, but as good process or bad process. You can make the perfect decision and still get a bad outcome. You can make a terrible decision and get rewarded. Poker teaches you to separate the two — and once you learn that, you start applying it everywhere. Business decisions, relationships, daily life.
I became more comfortable with uncertainty. Before poker, I needed to know how things would turn out before committing. Poker cured me of that. You never know how it turns out. You just make the best decision with the information you have.
I also became more patient. Not just at the table — but in life. Waiting for the right moment instead of forcing things.
So my question to you all: was there a specific moment when you realized poker was changing not just your game — but your mindset? A hand, a session, a downswing that taught you something about yourself you didn't expect?
I genuinely believe poker is one of the best teachers of emotional intelligence and decision-making that exists. But I'd love to hear your stories.



