So, You Want To Start Playing Poker? – Part 1
I have been asked a number of times by friends and acquaintances about poker. It is USAmericans' favorite game, and was so even before the boom. Post-boom, it's ok now for even the intellectual elite, who would otherwise frown on “gambling”, to like and enjoy poker.
I am somewhat used to the “Oh, so you're a doctor, I wanted to ask you...” syndrome of being a good poker player. As someone who also knows about computers, I have often been the person whom friends and acquaintances come to and ask their computer questions. Since I have barely ever used Microsoft products, I'm usually no help there — to their surprise. However, in poker, I'm well versed and knowledgeable in the ways that they need me to be, since I started from the very bottom games that interest new players.
When I started
teaching my friend Dan how to play,
roryk told
me:
It seems fun and innocent and cool to be teaching someone, until one of the people you get into playing cards completely destroys their life with it. 90% of the people are suckers in the games, and more likely than not if you get someone playing, they are going to be a sucker. [...] So just save yourself some hassle and tell them not to get involved and that it is a brutal, frustrating game.
I gave that advice serious consideration, but in the end, rejected it
(Sorry
roryk). I have never had anyone come to me to ask
about poker whom I judged to be susceptible to losing themselves in
addiction. I have a good sense for this, but even if I do screw up
and get someone involved who can't handle it, I am certainly not going
to blame myself. Should everyone who ever served an alcoholic their
first drink blame themselves? Of course not, it isn't their fault;
it's a mix of bad genetics, bad environment, and a lack of
self-control on the part of the alcoholic.
I model poker as an example of the typical USAmerican male hobby. Upper-middle class men spend a lot of money on their hobbies. Think of golf, for example. I know men who must dump a grand or two each and every year into their golf habits. They'll never make a dime of that back, of course. It's our culture; the “pursuit of happiness” appears right there in a one of our founding documents. Golf makes some men happy, so they dump all their so-called “disposable income” into it.
roryk is right, of course, many experts estimate that 90%
of regular poker players are long-term losers. I've never seen hard
data, nor a even rigorously computed estimation of that number, but
it's still probably correct. But being one of the 90% is far from
having a problem. If the player doesn't have a gambling problem,
there isn't any inherent additional harm in giving
poker a go and dropping a few grand a year in poker instead of golf.
Indeed, poker losses can surely be mitigated by careful study to no
more than any other hobby someone might undertake. And, the new
player might even end up a winner for the year. I think it's a fun
hobby and a great way to study the psychology of others, regardless
of financial outcome.
The first thing I always tell people who have interest in poker, is that they will be losers forever unless they plan a rigorous, diligent, involved and constant learning process that will take up a large portion of their free time. As a new player, you must realize that to become a strong player, it takes study and lots and lots of active practice (not the passive practice of playing without an eye to game improvement). It takes discipline, concentration and nerves of steel. But, it's also rewarding, just as it is always rewarding to engage in competitive hard work with direct financial reward.
Having heard the caveats, you may still want to give poker a go. You have some “disposable income” and want to take your shot. Then, I suggest you set a budget for the hobby and be disciplined about it. It can be disheartening to realized you don't have the time to put in to learn how to beat the games, but any hobby one might engage in can turn out that way, despite substantial financial investments. It's important that you make an up-front budgeting decision on how much you're willing to spend on the hobby and stick to it. I am sure that every day, a USAmerican man realizes he's never going to be that good of a golfer but that he'll keep playing anyway because he enjoys it, but he surely does so on a budget.
Anyway, the upshot is that I have no qualms about helping people learn
poker, with the caveats set forth. So, then the next question always
comes: How do I get started and what type of game should I play?
What should I read? Where should I go to start playing?
.
I've answered these questions many times over during the past few
years. I've decided, after
tmckearney asked
a few questions and I started
putting down the usual answers, that I'll instead do a series in
this journal, geared to help complete poker newbies get started. Each
Sunday night, until I run out of things to say, I'll make a post
helping new players navigate their way through the world of poker.
no subject
And then there are people who aren't addicts, who are problem gamblers like you describe, who don't have anyone to step in. They aren't even addicts, they just have a problem, but they can't get help for the problem because they don't know to. They are like people who have a traumatic experience and get messed up by it and never go to therapy and live the rest of their life screwed up by it. There was nothing wrong with them before, they could get help and be better, they just never do. They maybe can keep their job but their life is miserable. They never go all the way but they are always broke and scrounging around for money.
I don't think it is fine to teach kids about poker at all. People in the poker world are selfish, egotistical, greedy, money-loving people. Do you think children should be learning values from those kinds of people? I don't think so. I don't think my children should be looking at Antonio Estvandarie or whatever his name or those dirtbags on TV and imitating them and thinking they are role models. Do you think your child is going to learn the value of money looking at all of that money flying around without a care? Do you think he is going to learn the value of hard work gambling like that? Do you think he is going to learn about honesty and trust? Is your kid going to learn how to be responsible and dependable playing poker? How to get a job done, how to plan, how to tell the truth, how to care about other people and be empathetic. How to be a good person, to be nice and selfless? Or is he going to learn other lessons about being greedy. About lying to get what you want. About decieving other people. About being selfish. Will he learn about hard work sitting around just playing cards for money? What exactly is my kid going to learn playing poker again? Because all of those very bad things are REWARDED with money in poker. You think teaching kids poker is good?? Are you out of your mind? You want your kids to be playing poker? What kind of parent or parent-to-be are you?