I have played Pokers since I was 12. These players play in another Universe than I have EVER been.
Andy Beal, a Texas banker and self-mad Kazillionare, found in his mid-forties that he had extra time on his hands. This is a dangerous thing for anyone, but for a man who had spent the last 25 years amassing businesses, building a fortune and having NO free time, it can be totally disorienting. He decided to become a poker player, not just any poker player, but one skilled enough to beat the world's best. Over the next three years, he played the best poker players in Las Vegas (therefore, the best in the world) in head-to-head games with increasing stakes. Mr. Beal had the idea that the fewer the players, the better the opportunity to accurately "read" the opponent while minimizing the chances of his opponents reading him. The increasing stakes were the way for Mr. Beal to "take the pros out of their comfort zones." The amount of the stakes, based upon the small and big blind structure played in Texas Hold'em (the poker game being played), started at $1,000 - $2,000 but rapidly rose to being $20,000 - $40,000, then $30,000 - $60,000, with the top most blinds being $50,000 - $100,000. These people were playing, with regularity, where the amounts required to see the first two cards were more than most people make in a year. How obscene is that? As odd as it seems, the amounts wagered in these games is secondary to the true story told in this book.
The depth of this "history," is to be found in the characters who played the game. Mr. Beal's story is interesting in itself, the stories of the professional gamblers against whom he played are just as interesting. All of these people gamble to make a living, but the playing of the game is as important, if not more so, as the money they make. Doyle Brunson, a legendary poker player, is quoted "It takes kind of a sick person to play the way we do. I'm convinced we're all compulsive gamblers. We just find a way to win." p.10. That "way to win" is stringently honest, the people who play such levels have developed such perception skills, however, that it seems mystical or "fishy." To read the words of those individuals who play for a living, or as a challenge (Mr. Beal), it does not take long to hear the echo of pathology in their voices.
Mr. Craig goes to great lengths to present a well-balanced, unbiased account of the game and its players. The book is about an adult subject, but contains very few (only one?) profanity. The author describes the players as friendly, attentive, driven and likable. While playing, each seeks to obtain and keep an advantage over and withdraw HUGE sums of money from their opponent, yet away from such settings, these are usually the first people called should help be needed. Such connection can only be experienced in a context of intensity where each can witness the effort, commitment, pain, joy exerted in the event. Those who have fought wars experience this connection most deeply.
The players soon adapted, or would have, to the amount of money being risked in each game. They were needing higher and higher amounts to be risked in order to get "the thrill" of the game again. That leaves me to wonder, both about these players and myself, when is enough? Is there something missing in us that demands that we keep "chasing the dragon" with larger risks or the gathering of more stuff to prove that we are aliv
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