MajorGeneeral Posted yesterday at 04:33 PM #1 Posted yesterday at 04:33 PM Hey everyone. I’ve been hitting a brutal rough patch over the last week. It feels like every pocket pair gets cracked and my bluffs are getting constantly called down. I know variance is part of the game, but it is starting to affect my mental focus. What routines or mindsets do you use to reset your brain during a bad run?
novaesse Posted yesterday at 05:21 PM #2 Posted yesterday at 05:21 PM I straight up close the tables and go do something physical, even just a walk. If I stay staring at the screen replaying bad beats I’m toast.
nalorori Posted yesterday at 06:09 PM #3 Posted yesterday at 06:09 PM I drop stakes to micro and just grind volume, takes the emotional sting out when the money doesn't matter.
freezedoge Posted yesterday at 06:19 PM #4 Posted yesterday at 06:19 PM ngl i just log off and watch some sports instead, resets my head way better than staring at bad beats
rexwyn Posted yesterday at 06:27 PM #5 Posted yesterday at 06:27 PM I drop stakes to micro and just grind volume, takes the emotional sting out when the money doesn't matter. Yeah this is the move, I go even further and fire up play money tables just to get those dumb bluffs out of my system without torching my roll.
raxori Posted yesterday at 07:06 PM #6 Posted yesterday at 07:06 PM Tbh I step away the second I feel that “here we go again” dread creeping in before I even act. If I’m already tilted, I’m just donating, so I go make food or doomscroll for 20 mins and come back when the only voice in my head is the one counting combos.
Zexry Posted yesterday at 08:21 PM #7 Posted yesterday at 08:21 PM I just stop reviewing hands immediately after a session, my brain's way too cooked to be objective. A cold shower and 24 hours away from the felt does more for my game than any hand analysis in the moment
Frankiax Posted yesterday at 08:36 PM #8 Posted yesterday at 08:36 PM Tbh the physical reset is the only thing that works for me when I’m in that headspace. Even just a 10 min walk without my phone stops the mental doomloop faster than trying to logic my way out of it.
voxelle3 Posted 23 hours ago #9 Posted 23 hours ago Stepping away the second I feel that dread hit is something I’m still working on tbh, doomscrolling sounds like a way better use of that time than punting stacks.
Mikkelle42 Posted 23 hours ago #10 Posted 23 hours ago I feel that, the bluffs getting picked off constantly is the worst because it makes you doubt everything. I just force myself to quit entirely for 48 hours, no poker content at all, and come back with a clean slate.
vaelyn Posted 23 hours ago #11 Posted 23 hours ago When the bluffs keep getting called I just shut it all down and do something that has zero decision-making like watching a dumb show, fr my brain needs a hard reset.
runeen Posted 23 hours ago #12 Posted 23 hours ago Just forcing a full 48-hour break with zero poker content is the only thing that works for me too, ngl. When I'm in that headspace where every move feels wrong, I'm not learning anything by grinding through it.
annielovely Posted 23 hours ago #13 Posted 23 hours ago tbh i just shut teh laptop and hit a quick walk lol clears the head every time
Ivy dezzy Posted 23 hours ago #14 Posted 23 hours ago You just have to understand that there's nothing on earth that really worths your emotion
FlameSentinel Posted 22 hours ago #15 Posted 22 hours ago bro, i feel that too, sometimes i just jam out to some music or hit the gym, clears the head real good ?
ravenon6 Posted 21 hours ago #16 Posted 21 hours ago Honestly I don't think a full break always works because you just sit there stewing on the bad beats anyway. I prefer to drop down in stakes and focus purely on making mathematically correct decisions, ignoring the reuslts completely for a session.
Lyrawyn Posted 20 hours ago #17 Posted 20 hours ago do you ever review your hands after a session or just immediately walk away? sometimes i dig into the stats when im running bad and it either calms me down or sends me deeper lol
rajadch9 Posted 17 hours ago #19 Posted 17 hours ago try tracking the exact number of bad beats in a notebook, seeing the tiny percentage usually calms me right down.
thornumry Posted 16 hours ago #20 Posted 16 hours ago I get the logic, but if I'm already tilting, digging into stats just feeds the mental spiral for me. I shut the laptop hard and refuse to even look at the hand history until the pain's a bit dulled the next morning.
Gladeoresse Posted 16 hours ago #21 Posted 16 hours ago I find a total shutdown makes the next session worse because the frustration just lingers unprocessed.
emblemblem Posted 15 hours ago #23 Posted 15 hours ago bro i feel you, sometimes i just close it all down and play some mindless mobile games for like 20 mins, realy helps reset the tilt meter no cap ?
SteelWarden Posted 12 hours ago #24 Posted 12 hours ago bro just take a break and pet a dog or something, no cap my worst downswings ended when i stoped caring so much lol ?
Danishmicky Posted 12 hours ago #25 Posted 12 hours ago 14 hours ago, novaesse said: I straight up close the tables and go do something physical, even just a walk. If I stay staring at the screen replaying bad beats I’m toast.
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