Poker pros and lifestyle

flamenkit154

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  • #1
I’ve read quite a few interviews with people who decided to pursue a professional poker career. Apparently, it’s a bit like a combat sport. Players follow a strict daily discipline and maintain a healthy lifestyle.
They work out a lot, drink very little alcohol, etc., all to keep a good mindset and strong concentration.
Has it ever crossed your mind to become a professional poker player?
 
Kasztor007

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  • #2
Honestly, at this point I wouldn’t switch to professional poker. I enjoy my job, and for me the idea of grinding and analyzing for many hours every week would become too monotonous over time.
Also, long downswings can be mentally brutal. I know a few people who lived off poker for years some were successful but most of them eventually burned out or gave it up.
I respect poker pros and the discipline their lifestyle requires, but for me poker works much better as a hobby and a form of self-development, not as my main source of income under constant pressure.
 
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Phoenix Wright

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  • #3
flamenkit154 said:
I’ve read quite a few interviews with people who decided to pursue a professional poker career. Apparently, it’s a bit like a combat sport. Players follow a strict daily discipline and maintain a healthy lifestyle.
They work out a lot, drink very little alcohol, etc., all to keep a good mindset and strong concentration.
Has it ever crossed your mind to become a professional poker player?
"Professional" not really, but more "serious" like a reg, yeah. I've thought about it.
 
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ramdon p358

ramdon p358

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  • #4
Professional poker players need to be incredibly disciplined, both for playing and studying. I'd love to pursue it professionally, but it's very difficult; for now, I see it as a way to earn extra money.
 
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Happy Bobi

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Unfortunately, I can't become a professional player because I'm not that brave. I have a stable job that brings me income, and I'm not ready to risk it. Perhaps if I had started playing poker earlier, when I was more inclined to take risks, I might have been willing to consider poker as a profession. But now I am not ready for such adventures.
 
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flamenkit154

flamenkit154

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  • #6
Guys, I honestly think the best decision is to never aim to become a professional poker player.
It’s extremely risky.
The risk–reward ratio is clearly unbalanced.
 
Alpha737

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  • #7
For sure — it has crossed my mind, but the more I’ve learned about poker, the more I respect how demanding the pro lifestyle really is.
At a high level, poker really does resemble a combat sport: strict routines, constant study, emotional control, bankroll discipline, and taking care of your body and mind. Long sessions, brutal variance, and pressure mean that fitness, sleep, and low alcohol aren’t optional — they’re edge.
For me, that’s exactly why I’ve chosen to keep poker more on the serious-hobby / semi-competitive side. I love the strategy, the challenge, and the grind — but I also value balance and flexibility. Poker rewards discipline, whether you go pro or not, and those habits carry over into life.
 
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  • #8
It should not be forgotten that poker is primarily a game of chance. All the training is useless if you are unlucky. It is already a lucky situation if you are born in a place where the opportunities are greater. I will remain an amateur player, but poker gives me a little extra income....
 
s0ftdumps

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  • #9
flamenkit154 said:
I’ve read quite a few interviews with people who decided to pursue a professional poker career. Apparently, it’s a bit like a combat sport. Players follow a strict daily discipline and maintain a healthy lifestyle.
They work out a lot, drink very little alcohol, etc., all to keep a good mindset and strong concentration.
Has it ever crossed your mind to become a professional poker player?
It has crossed my mind, especially after reading those interviews. I think the discipline part is very real, poker at a high level is more like a mental endurance sport than a game. That said, I also think there’s a survivorship bias in those stories. We hear from the people who made it work, not the many who burned out or realized the variance and pressure weren’t worth it. For me, poker is best as a serious hobby where I can study, improve, and enjoy it without tying my entire livelihood to swings I can’t fully control.
 
TeUnit

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  • #10
The "pro poker lifestyle" has claimed quite a few players, that is why I think there is a focus on staying in good shape and living well.

Sitting at a poker table for 12 hours a day will take its toll on you.
 
dangbaonguyen93

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  • #11
To become a professional poker player, you need perseverance and effort, in my opinion.
 
marco198121

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Learn to lose before you learn to win
 
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ninocabral

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  • #13
professional life in poker is tiring and well-regulated and disciplined
 
Emily Trott

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  • #14
I don't know if I've ever thought of trying to become a professional player. Maybe when I was a lot younger, but I honestly don't remember one way or the other. Nowadays I have no desire whatsoever to take something that I love doing as a hobby and turn it into a job.
 
DiazPoker3101

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The brain is also a muscle — in fact, it’s the organ that consumes the most energy, so it needs to be well nourished to function at its best.
 
tuitui

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  • #16
First of all; I'm not good enough. But yes, at my greatest moments I have considered it. :D (always after the next game I come to my senses) Seriously speaking, I don't think I would have what it takes. I would not be able to handle big losses and constant pressure. I'm fine with playing with money I can handle loosing, but playing poker for living would never work for me. It has it's glamour and I do admire the best players, but for me poker works best as a challenge and hobby, where you can develop and test yourself without having to rely on one card for your entire living.
 
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  • #17
I guess it depends on your financial status. If you have financial stability or multiple sources of income, you can play whenever or as much as you want. If you're like most people and need to have a job to pay the bills, you might need to play for a long time before you have a results. Unless you have a big score early in your career which does not happen frequently. Daniel Negreanu is a professional poker player, yet he is very negative on his last wsop sessions. So you need a big enough bankroll to afford that type of financial loss.
 
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john_entony

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  • #18
Of course, I've thought about it. But I doubt my knowledge of poker is enough to make this idea come true. Also, I'm quite limited in my financial abilities and can't afford to play in big tournaments. But maybe someday I'll be able to accomplish this goal. :unsure:
 
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  • #19
I simply couldn´t deal with all the pressure that lifestyle implies.That said, I prefer to play online poker just as a hobby.
 
Alex Houngan

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  • #20
Yes, professional poker really does seem to require a healthy lifestyle and very strict self-discipline. You have to stay mentally sharp, control emotions, and treat it almost like a full-time sport. Personally, I’m not sure how long I could live at that intensity without burning out. For me, poker works best as a serious hobby rather than a career that controls your entire life.
 
hardongear

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  • #21
Yes very strongly back when I first started studying and playing 20+ years ago. Strongly enough that I made a list of all the pros and cons of running one's own business vs being a pro poker player. Turns out running your own business is easier, better/steady good money when compared to poker and easier mentally. Fact is most people should never think about being a poker pro because it's at least 5 times harder than they will ever work at any day job they have. I'd even go as far as too say if one can't start and run his own business he likely also isn't capable of being a pro poker player as both require a lot of the same skills, abilities, smarts and knowledge.

At the end of the day I'm glad chose the path I did way back then and kept poker as a serious hobby. As I would have hated my life if I turned out looking like the vast majority of miserable, insurable and hateful so called poker pros I see today sitting at any given table grinding their life away for the rather measly avg lifestyle they have. Hell now-days most them have to have 2-3 other jobs outside of just playing poker that involve poker just to get by.

Cheers!!!
 
austral

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  • #22
That’s the dream I have, but first I need to learn how to properly manage my bankroll, emotions, and discipline, and not underestimate variance and mental pressure.
 
dompoker

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  • #23
You have to be very committed, to lead the lifestyle of a poler professional, because you would have to strictly comply with certain habits, for mental and physical health. I don't think it's easy.
 
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  • #24
Combat sports are a very hard camp, making weight, getting fresh and after the fight, you reset, you accumulate a very long work in a very short time, it's not like profesional poker. Of course there are similarities, but the general routine is different.
 
margmilo44

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  • #25
you would really have to love the grind. are we talking official pro or online grinder?
 
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