Your Best Teacher Is Your Own Mistakes 🔬

Sos1l

Sos1l

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In poker, just like in life, the most valuable lessons come through pain.
Every mistake has two sides of a coin.

On one side — the cost:
pain, regret, guilt, disappointment, self-criticism, emotional pressure.

On the other — the value:
mistakes teach far deeper than victories ever could.
A win inspires.
A mistake improves you.

Mistakes are a powerful engine of evolution.
And if we don’t use them properly, we lose a huge opportunity to grow.

Through pain a player becomes stronger in poker.
Through suffering a person becomes wiser in life.

If you don’t want to lose, you must understand your weaknesses —
because weaknesses are what create mistakes.

Poker holds a very important truth that applies to life as well:
the more mistakes you make, the lower your chances of winning.


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My mistakes — the ones I’m aware of

— I sometimes play tired.
A critical mistake. Fatigue kills focus, logic, discipline and patience.

— I get mentally exhausted when I don’t win for a long time.
When strong hands don’t come, or they miss the board — it happens to everyone, but it still affects your psychology and decision-making.

— My table selection is weak.
At some tables I crush.
At others — I lose badly.
This clearly means there are players stronger than me.
I accept that.
But I still sit and battle them, even though I’ve paid the price many times.

— I study too little: 10% study, 90% play.
I know it’s not enough.
I need at least 30% study time to grow steadily.

— Sometimes I slowplay where it’s too risky.
Sometimes I fastplay where slowplay would be the better strategy.

— My ego.
It’s hard for me to switch it off at the table.
When I see greedy, overly aggressive players, I want to punish them.
And then I stop playing +EV poker.
I start fighting the person, not the situation.
And ego is almost always a leak.

“The biggest mistake is not learning from your mistakes.” Confucius
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My question to you:

What mistakes do YOU acknowledge and accept?
What conclusions did you make after analyzing yourself?
 
austral

austral

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I accept human and strategic errors, not bad cards.
Every session is analyzed for decision quality, emotional control, opponent reading, and bankroll management.
I maximize long-term EV, not win every single hand.
honesty with oneself and the discipline to learn from every mistake.
 
Sos1l

Sos1l

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Well done. That means you have a future. You will be, or already are, better than most👏
I accept human and strategic errors, not bad cards.
Every session is analyzed for decision quality, emotional control, opponent reading, and bankroll management.
I maximize long-term EV, not win every single hand.
honesty with oneself and the discipline to learn from every mistake.
 
Sos1l

Sos1l

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Silver Level
Joined
Mar 14, 2022
Total posts
173
Chips
73
Very good masage my guy!!
Thank u very much.
I won the tournament yesterday СС On WPT And with the 20 dollars I won, I went to play Flash and gave everything away. Constant cooler and troubles. Conclusion: Under no circumstances should I play there again.

Conclusion.

You shouldn’t play where there is no opportunity to analyze other players.
Understanding what level your opponents are at saves you many times over.

You also shouldn’t continue playing where the RNG is broken — when there are anomalies in every third hand and too many coolers. That’s a graveyard.

I like WPT because of its RNG and lower variance,
but apparently on micro-limits in almost all rooms the RNG works in a brutal way.
 
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