Over your craps-betting experience, you’ll likely have more losing periods than winners. Accept it. You must learn to play in the real world, not in fantasy land. Craps is devised for the participant to lose.
Let us say, after two hours, the ivories have whittled your chips down to twenty dollars. You have not seen a smokin’ throw in forever. Even though squandering is as much a part of craps as acquiring a win, you cannot end up but feel cursed. You begin to wonder why you even thought about coming to Vegas to start with. You were solid for 2 hours, but it did not work. You are looking to win so much that you fritter away control of your common sense. You are down to your final 20 dollars for the day and you have little fight left. Leave!
You must never give up, never accede, never consider, "This sucks, I am going to put the rest on the Hard 4 and, if I am defeated, then I’ll depart. But if I win, I will be back where I began." That is the most brainless thing you can do at the close of a losing game.
If you can’t acknowledge not winning, you have no reason to be making bets. If you cannot bear not winning a given game, then drop out of that session and take your money. Do not piss your cash away on a terrible wager looking to make it big and get your money back in one great go.
If it’s a horrible day and you are deprived of a lot swiftly, then acknowledge defeat and cash out with the $10, $15, or $20 that you have left. Take that remaining $20, have a beer in the bar, enjoy the band. Play the money in a five cent electronic poker game and perhaps get a 1,000-coin jackpot for 50 dollars. Put it in your wallet, locate your other half, and spend some time with her. Don’t relent. Do something other than piss your money away on a non-winning proposition wager. Do not throw in the towel.
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