This post was going to start with me fuming on the car ride home after a dismal night at the casino. Â But after a little reflection, I realized the bad night wasn’t the point, it was my bad thinking.
It started with me sitting at a $100 NLH game. There was this drunk guy, so drunk the dealer had to help him count his chips drunk. He was sitting in front of a pile of chips and raising every, and I mean every, hand. It looked like easy money.  In a pronounced slur, he would tell anybody who listened that he had racked up over a $1000 in less than half an hour.
It was obvious this guy wasn’t walking out of the casino with one dime of this money. Â I figured, why not be a pal and help him part with it. Â Why wait for a great hand? This guy’s drunk, why not help myself?
I pick up a very marginal hand. It’s an insta-fold against anyone but this guy. He raises and I’m happy to get it all in. Â He’s happy to call.
I have him dominated. Â He catches. Â Re-buy. No big deal.
Soon, I’m against him heads up again.  He puts in his auto-raise.  Once again, I figure I’m ahead and I call.  Turns out I’m right again, but moments later, I’m out another buy-in.
This happens a few more times.
Getting the picture? Â Of course you do. At first glance, I was outraged I wasn’t winning. Â But then I started thinking about it. Â I may have known where I was, but truthfully I was barely ahead. At best, no more than 70/30.
I never considered there was a good chance I could lose four times in a row. Â In my excitement to take down the King of Coronas, I didn’t factor in the grim reality:Â he had the chips to weather the storm and I didn’t.
Big mistake.
So now I realize that I didn’t even play poker that night. Â I gambled on a few expensive coin flips.
And from now on, that’s not why I play poker.
Why do you play? Let me know at stories@whydoiplaypoker.net