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hokiegreg's picture
Playing Poker For A Living: It's A Marathon, Not A Sprint

Playing poker for a living: it's a marathon, not a sprint I came across the following statement from a successful HUSNG reg on 2+2 a little while ago: "Playing poker for a living is an incredibly stressful lifestyle; it's a sedentary, antisocial, unhealthy lifestyle; I hate it sometimes, but I love the money and the freedom, and it's better than my alternative options… " A couple of posters immediately chimed in with the traditional "+1", which got me thinking: it's interesting how the majority of people seriously involved in the game would agree with parts of that quote. It's probably a very true observation for most of them. And why wouldn't it be? How can playing what is essentially a video game, full time, have different consequences? What I will try to convey here is that it doesn't have to be this way. Accepting this as a basic reality of the game is a fundamental mistake. You can't socialize via the internet, roll in and out of bed to glue yourself to multiple computer screens day after day, not care about diet or exercise, and expect to be rolling around in money five years from now. It's unrealistic, and what's more, it’s the reason why so few grinders enjoy long-term success. I have a very clear picture of this today - because I used to feel exactly the same way. When I dropped out of school to focus on poker, I found myself losing touch with a lot of my non-poker friends, most of who didn't understand or agree with my choices. My free time was almost systematically invested in grinding, thinking about grinding, working on strategy, etc. In just a few short years, poker had gone from a hobby to an all-consuming way of life. As a general rule, once people achieve a certain level of success and start making serious money, they often fail to identify that this is despite their stressful, sedentary, unhealthy lifestyle, not because of it. Things could actually be better, but they can't see that because they are making more money than ever before. But if they constantly chase the next dollar, as if their life were a never-ending session, they risk waking up one day and realizing that the passion they once had for the game has gone completely. And how do you go from making 100k a year while sitting in your underwear, back into the real world? Make no mistake: the average player is getting more and more competent. As for you, if you reach a point where you think you've “made it”, and you stagnate, or even regress, because of your bad habits, inevitably the game catches up with you. Suddenly the success you were enjoying only a few months back becomes a distant memory, and you are dealing with atrocious breakeven stretches, dropping down levels, wondering where it all went wrong. Quite a few regulars who not so long ago were able to get lobbies at the 300s/500s, are hardly even able to sit the 110s anymore. These players had majestic Sharkscope graphs, sometimes well into six figure profits, but nothing to show for it. They are absolutely irrelevant in the current context. They float around, unable to make a comeback but not strong enough to quit. How sad is that? . Success doesn't magically last forever. Don't waste your talent!   So... how do you avoid these pitfalls? How do you stay motivated, keep the drive to become a better player?   About a year and a half ago, I got to the point where I found myself making very decent money from my play, but somehow feeling unhappy, or incomplete. I was no longer Greg Tiller, who happens to play poker. I was Greg Tiller, the poker player - 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. I was 26 at the time, and asked myself: is this a realistic long-term lifestyle? Could I be in a serious relationship or raise a family living like this? Could I be more balanced? I decided I wanted poker to be a part of my life, but not to take over my life. That I needed to be able to separate myself from the game whilst still pushing myself as a player, becoming more efficient within the fewer hours I spent at the tables. I started doing a million little things to tweak and improve my routine. Tracking what I was doing daily in a journal, trying to identify trends that lead to success or failure. In this long trial-and-error process, some of my ideas worked, and most of them didn't. In the end, I came to the conclusion that one of the things that attracts a lot of players to the “poker way of life” - the lack of schedule and absence of daily responsibilities - is a big part of what can pull them into the wrong mentality. So I decided to take this into my own hands. I called on mental coach Jared Tendler for help, which turned out to be one of the best investments I've ever made. The most important thing I learned from him was the concept of “mental muscle”. I prefer this analogy: If you go to the gym to lift some weights, you would normally tend to warm up in order to loosen yourself up, before going through your workout and pushing yourself really hard. This actually breaks down your muscles initially (which is why you are so exhausted by the end of it). You don't go back to the gym the very next day and simply repeat the process. You give yourself a day or two for your muscles to recover, to get stronger. And when you go through your routine the second time, it actually seems easier. That's exactly how Jared wanted me to picture the mental muscle. Something that needs to be warmed up before it’s pushed hard, and which needs to recuperate afterward . You can't just go at it with everything you've got every single day, just like you can't go to the gym and bench press every day without hurting yourself physically. You don't see players who grind day in, day out, for five or six years and who are still successful – it just doesn't happen. If you want your career to last for more than a year or two, you need a plan. I decided to break down a schedule for my week, working around the times where I thought the action was best. Remember, a month is a long time. Setting a monthly goal is important, but you also need to have even shorter-term, less results-oriented goals. Here's a peek at my weekly routine. I consider it the organization of a mental athlete, designed to help me keep my edge over the competition. Monday My off-day. On Mondays, I stay away from my computer completely and recover from the previous week.. I do something different, and barely think about poker at all. It doesn't have to be meditating or composing haiku, going out with friends and just having fun is perfectly acceptable; in fact, it's recommended! Tuesday My first day back on the grind. That’s when I take care of coaching-related tasks, emails, study/watch videos, etc. Having set a volume goal for the week, say 250 games, I'll put in about 10 to 15% of that volume on Tuesday. It's my warm up day, so typically, I'll one-table and consciously focus on my decision-making. After all, you can't expect to take one or two days off and be comfortable firing up three tables at your highest stakes the minute you sit down at your desk. You want to loosen up your mental muscle, so you can push hard the days after. Wednesday I'm still not hitting full gear, and take some time for more studying and coaching. Of course I know that not everyone reading this article is a coach, or even a professional player. For them, this time could be used to get life stuff out of the way, papers and phone calls that kind of thing, so that the next few days can be just about poker. I try to do 15 to 20% of my volume on Wednesday, two-tabling. Thursday-Saturday These are my heavy volume days. My goal is to play from 20 to 25% of my weekly volume on each of those days. The fun thing about this schedule is that if you hit your highest allotted volume goal every day, you will be done by Saturday, and then you’ll get your Sunday free: a nice, healthy, short-term incentive. But most importantly, it's flexible : if at any point you’re finding it difficult to play your A game over long stretches and are taking too many breaks, you can just try to get as close as possible to the minimum allotted daily volume. It'll leave you with 15 to 20% of your weekly volume to play out on Sunday. This setup makes me more predictable. My girlfriend likes it because there are days when she knows I'll be less busy. I can go out for dinner with my family and plan it two weeks in advance, whereas in the past I’d have always been asking myself: “What if the games were really good?”. Naturally, I do not recommend blindly adopting this routine; it's tailored specifically to my personal needs and my speciality as a poker player, HUSNGs. However, I strongly believe that any poker player can and should find a variation of it that suits him. It's simply one of the most +EV decisions you can make. The basic ideas of how to approach the game should remain the same. You warm up, you push yourself hard, you recover. Rinse, and repeat. The structure you establish and the time you put aside for non-poker activities encourage you to be social, to be active, and avoid burnout. You know your off-days are just as important as the times you grind, because in order to come back stronger, you need your mental muscle to recover. Finally, the short-term, non-monetary goals you give yourself allow you to detach your emotions from how good or bad you're running. The actual breakdown of the days varies a lot. When I was still allowed to play on Pokerstars, some days went by quickly – in maybe four to four and half hours – because I was getting constant action. Even when I finished early though, I wouldn't really push myself past the 25 percent limit. If the action is so good during the week that I'm way ahead of pace and reach my goals early – then more often than not, I just cut it short. Deciding to play an extra hundred games can be tempting, but remember, your volume goal is the estimation of what you're capable of handling while still playing well. How many hours you play consecutively varies from player to player. Personally, I can handle three-and-a-half to four hours and focus on a high level, but that's my limit. After that, I'll take a break, come back and put in another two hours. It's pretty rare that I can go back-to-back four hour sessions. Although I want to push myself, I'm constantly thinking about this as a long term thing: if I overextend this week, I'll survive, but it's going to take it's toll somewhere down the road. Attempting things like doubling your volume over the course of a month or string seven hour sessions together is not “sucking it up and grinding”. It's suicidal. You simply do not have the mental muscle. And that's the root of the problem, it’s the reason why there are so few long-term success stories in poker: too many grinders break down their mental muscle, instead of building it up gradually.   Consistency is key: playing poker for a living is a marathon, not a sprint.   It's natural to try to achieve success as fast as you can. But not enough people are happy to pace themselves, to have consistent results week after week. Not financial results (a week is too short of a unit to measure your success by a dollar amount; i.e a few hundred games), but by setting realistic goals and accomplishing them. Work your way up gradually, and be realistic about improvement. Odds are you're not the next livb112. Don't try to compare yourself to other people. Compare yourself to what the best version of yourself can be, and try to get there. I don't want it to seem like I have a perfectly laid out, highly specific poker plan set up for the next five years. I'm open-minded about whatever comes up. Poker players (those who survive at least) need to be adaptive. As Black Friday painfully illustrated, the poker environment is constantly changing, sometimes at a drastic pace – and I'm ready to change with it. Five months ago for example I’d almost never touched a hyper turbo. Since then, I've worked hard, read almost everything relevant on the topic, watched all mersenneary's videos. Now a sizeable part of my volume is at the $250 hypers (the highest limit on the Merge Network). The great thing about the schedule I've outlined is that anyone can try it out straight away, and get postive results very quickly. I started organizing my weeks like this two months before the Austin camp. Initially, my students were somewhat reluctant to dive into something similar, because it felt “too much like a job”. By the end of the month though, everyone there, including PrimordialAA, had adopted some aspect of it that fit into their lives. It almost boggles my mind that there is so much training material out there yet barely anyone touches on this, when in my opinion we are dealing with the biggest leak of the average player, one that guarantees that they don't get the best out of themselves. The average reg is improving, but these bad habits remain extremely widespread. No matter how good the average player becomes strategically, the vast majority will still succumb to this black hole of a lifestyle. Don't let that happen to you.Good luck HokieGreg  

ServerBTest002's picture
1st... :) Ty Hokie for this

1st... :) Ty Hokie for this long post1.Success doesn't magically last forever. Don't waste your talent! Success doens't last forever but we can work in order it as long as possibile imo. Do you think in 2 years you won't beat the games anymore?  2.Tracking what I was doing daily in a journalYep, definitely it could help... I'm doing an excel file with that... also you can help yourself with rescuetime and a organizer... with the first program you can track automatically what you are doing in front of the PC, and with the second you you will be able to organize better your day 3.Deciding to play an extra hundred games can be tempting, but remember, your volume goal is the estimation of what you're capable of handling while still playing wellyep, of course, this is a great insight. I working with Jared and he also told me sothing really close to what you said...I stated that I can play 8 hours per day with no problems at all, he asked me: "Are you capable of it or are you just estimate it?". Obv I was estimate it, you can't play 8 hours per day everyday, playing your A game, you have to be realistic with your goals  Again ty for this long article, its lenghts is proportianed to its importance

AnJo280's picture
I like that. I decided to

I like that. I decided to structure my time to stop wasting too much time F5-ing 2+2,pokerstrategy.com etc. so i set aside exactly 5 hours a day dedicated to poker. I tried to actually fit my whole life into a structure/routine but its something i cant do for too long(i guess i have to improve on that) but i´m very strict about spending those 5 hours on poker and spending the whole weekend away from poker resting.I read "how life imitates chess" by kasparov and what really stayed with me is where he talked about his chess education and said his coach would not tolerate not having enough rest. Resting is part of the job and you had to take it serious.I never thought about it like that.So one of the things i work on aside from poker is learning to rest well. A decent sleeping schedule,healthy nutrition(i suck at that one) and enough physical activity to go to bed grateful to relax is what i want to achieve monday to friday and reward myself with a weekend free of any rules or mental work. I also have an excel file where i note everything i want to achieve on a daily basis and compare it month to months to make sure i´m better this months than i was last month. I got really good at it for may and june but somehow with my birth day in july i started to slack off again so your article might be the spark i needed to go back to work on myself and crush that weak guy who carried my name a month ago. :D

mrbambocha's picture
"working around the times

"working around the times where I thought the action was best."How big of an impact does it make for the ST. The best action is at 4am in NZ, then its over 240k+ players, if I start playing at 9am instead the games start to decress to something like 60k players, but theres constant action at the $15 ST anyways. Would you go up at 4am? There should also be most fish at the weekends but thats also the time when all the friends are free from work and wanna go out? What do you think about that? To AnJo280 :"I also have an excel file where i note everything i want to achieve on a daily basis and compare it month to months to make sure i´m better this months than i was last month."I do the same thing. Whats in your excel file (more specific)?I note down how much time im playing/wathing videos/forum/HH.Then how much I of the time played I played my A/B/C- game. Then I have non-poker stuff where I give myself points according how well I've done it:Workout, Nutrition, Meditation, Socialising and Hobby

AnJo280's picture
i only do this for life

i only do this for life stuff. Poker is fixed in my Routine so that i dont need that  motivation anymore.I use it for sports mostly because thats where i need motivation the most and comparison is pretty effective while poker is tough to measure because you cant measure quality.

belrhitir's picture
as I said on 2+2 one of the

as I said on 2+2 one of the best articles i've ever read. It helped me get my shit together and have a more "stable" life 

hokiegreg's picture
Rachid, I'm really happy to

Rachid, I'm really happy to hear that. Keep it up!

hokiegreg's picture
"working around the times

"working around the times where I thought the action was best."How big of an impact does it make for the ST. The best action is at 4am in NZ, then its over 240k+ players, if I start playing at 9am instead the games start to decress to something like 60k players, but theres constant action at the $15 ST anyways. Would you go up at 4am? There should also be most fish at the weekends but thats also the time when all the friends are free from work and wanna go out? What do you think about that?I like to use the term "Life EV".Life EV: The expected value a decision has on your overall life.For example:The Life EV of going to the gym regularly for me is very high: it makes me feel better about myself, i have higher energy, i am more focused.The Life EV of me going to sleep at 5am is very low: I wont wake up until 2PM, my girlfriend will be on life tilt, I will probably skip the gym sometimes bc I hate going when everyone gets off from work bc its busy, I'm just overall less motivated during the evenings too...I'm a morning/afternoon person. It just doesn't work for me.So basically, I think you just need to figure out what the LifeEV of waking up at 4AM is. Compare that to the $EV of playing poker at the best time. It's a personal decision whether it is worth it to you or not. I think you ABSOLUTELY should give up some $EV to increase your overall LifeEV sometimes. As you read in my article, it's not just about money. It's important, and we can make lots and lots of it. But we still need to have a healthy life that we enjoy. That healthy lifestyle will translate to more money over the long term anyways.Hokie

mrbambocha's picture
Ok, I will think about it. Im

Ok, I will think about it.Im back to waking up at 3am. Did it before and I liked it but in the end it was fucking hard to get any good sleep if you go to bed 9pm at a hostel. So now Im staying at a house and are back to 3am. Feels like it works out pretty well. Nobody to distract me when I play, I have the day free to spend time with friends, and I get the good sleeping hours for the body. (I think I've read that the sleep you get from going to bed at 9pm is better then the sleep you get if you go to bed at 2am, because if follows the bodys natural rythom better.) And, the best part of it: I dont have to spend the rest of the day thinking that I should grind, so I have the whole day to cool-down and relax :) Will see where the balance is.I dont know why, but I cant wake up at 6/7 or 8am. I just cant. I usually hate mornings, but for some reason waking up at 3am is easy as fakk

jackoneill's picture
Social Aspects

Well, this is not relevant for me anymore at the moment, since I got that job, but things may change and I might eventually have to play poker for a living in future, so I'd like to ask you anyways:How do you deal with the social aspects of being a professional poker player ? Poker not being accepted by the societyI had this huge problem in the past that I couldn't really talk to anyone that I knew in real life about what I was doing. Most of the people don't see poker as a game of skill, they think it's something between pure gambling and a disease that requires psychological treatment. And those who accept it as a game of skill immediately start asking embarassing question like how do I pay taxes, can you get health / unemployment insurance and all that stuff.It's also very difficult to teach people this idea of your bankroll being a business investment, not money you can freely spend. People were so obsessed with that money that I even got scared about anonymous tips to the tax office or stuff like that. Well, maybe I simply have the wrong friends, but while I was still working as a software engineer, I had like 1.5 times their salary, but it was ok, everybody accepted it. But when it comes to poker, they only see the amount in the Cashier and what they could buy with that money - not how much you actually earn by grinding a ton.How to get a normal job after playing for a living for some longer period of timeAnd there's also that what if you fail question - which also starts to worry me more and more. My biggest issue is that poker doesn't seem to be accepted in the society at all - at least that's what I've been told from all my friends - which could become a big problem when I ever want to get into a normal job again.Let's say I play poker for a living for the next 2-3 years, then decide to find a normal job as a software engineer again - what do I write in my resume ? I'd need to tell a future employer a good story why I didn't finish university, then - after having over ten years of work experience, the last 8 of them in the same company - dropped from the face of the earth for 2-3 years.Some people even said that telling a potential employer that I've been playing poker for a living is a lot worse that just saying I've been unemployed, unable to find a job - they would never trust me with any important position, especially not money. Whenever I tried to explain that, the reaction was something like ok, but you're looking for a job now, so you must have failed with your poker "career" - how can we be sure that you won't take that money into the next casino ?The most positive "advise" I got so far was that I should just do it for a couple of months or even years if I don't have any option, and then before applying to any normal job do some psychological therapy, get some document stating that I'm "healed", then "openly" tell the new employer.  How ridiculous. I've played full time for the last 5 months now and so far, and during this time, I only told a very few people that I know IRL about it - the reaction was negative from all of them.Does online poker really have a futureThis one is from my mom (she doesn't know about Black Friday or Full Tilt, and it better stays this way), just like that last question. Trying to forumulate it in my own words as good as I can:How can we be reasonably sure that online poker will have a future, that people will still have enough money to gamble in future, with the economy going down and everything. What if the government passes some law that makes online poker illegal (as I said, she doesn't know about BF or what happened in France, anything like that).My personal answer to this is how can you be sure that other job has a future. I have been layed off twice now, so I don't take anything for granted anymore. You have to work really damn hard to make some decent money, so this is simply a business decision.