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Over your craps-wagering life, you’ll likely have more losing sessions than winners. Accept it. You have to discover how to compete in the real world, not in a fairytale. Craps is designed for the participant to lose.
Let us say, after 2 hours, the ivories have whittled your chips down to $20. You haven’t seen a hot throw in a long time. Although losing is as much a part of craps as being victorious, you can not end up but feel lousy. You begin to wonder why you even bothered coming to sin city in the first place. You were solid for two hours, but it didn’t work. You are looking to win so badly that you fritter away control of your clear thinking. You’re down to your final 20 dollars for the session and you have absolutely no fight left. Stop!
You can never give up, never bow out, never consider, "This is aweful, I am going to place the remainder on the Hard 4 and, if I lose, then I will walk away. However should I win, I’ll be right back where I started." That is the dumbest thing you can perform at the conclusion of a non-winning day.
If you cannot accept losing, you have no business gambling. If you can not stomach not winning a distinct session, then bow out of that session and take your money. Do not throw your cash away on a appalling wager wishing to hit it huge and win your money back all at once.
If it is an awful night and you are deprived of a lot quickly, then acknowledge defeat and cash out with the 10 dollars, 15 dollars, or 20 dollars that you have left. Take that remaining 20 dollars, have a drink in the cocktail lounge, listen to the live music. Put it in a nickel electronic poker machine and maybe hit a 1,000-coin win for 50 dollars. Put it in your pocket, locate your girlfriend, and spend some time with them. Don’t give up. Do something besides pee your money away on a losing proposition wager. Don’t throw in the towel.