• Home
  • Archived Blogs
    • James Grosjean (AP)
      • About James Grosjean
      • View all posts
    • Bob Dancer (Video Poker)
      • About Bob Dancer
      • View all posts
      • Video Poker Classes
    • Richard Munchkin (AP)
      • About Richard Munchkin
      • View all posts
    • Lou Antonius
      • About Dr. Lou Antonius
      • View all posts
    • Blair Rodman (Poker)
      • About Blair Rodman
      • View all posts
    • FrankB (Sports)
      • About FrankB
      • View all posts
    • Jack Andrews (Sports)
      • About Jack Andrews
      • View all posts
    • Jimmy Jazz (AP)
      • View all posts
    • Anthony Curtis
      • About Anthony Curtis
      • View all posts
    • Guest Bloggers
    • Podcast
  • The Games
    • Bingo Rooms
    • Blackjack
    • Keno Rooms
    • Poker Rooms
    • Video Poker
      • Best Video Poker
      • Bob Dancer Articles
      • Game Room
    • Sports Betting Books
  • Shop
    • Blackjack Strategy
    • Casino Comps & Promotions
    • Casino-Game Strategy Cards
    • Game Protection
    • James Grosjean Strategy Cards (ShopLVA Exclusive)
    • GWAE-Author Products
    • Las Vegas Advisor Membership + Member Rewards
    • Poker-Strategy
    • Sports Betting & Daily Fantasy
    • Tournament Play
    • Video Poker Strategy
  • Arnold Snyder’s Blackjack Forum Online
  • LVA Home
  • Home
  • Video Poker
  • Confirmed One More Time

Confirmed One More Time

September 24, 2013 Leave a Comment Written by Bob Dancer

Recently, Bonnie read to me a headline from the Las Vegas Review-Journal that said Las Vegas has some of the worst drivers in the country. According to a study done by Allstate Insurance, Las Vegas ranked 130th out of 195 cities with populations of at least 50,000.

This information was not a big surprise to me. According to my reasoning, many of the problems with Las Vegas drivers are attributable to the casinos. First of all, casinos give away lots of free alcohol — so a higher percentage of drivers are, to at least some degree, driving under the influence. Second, at any given time, many drivers in greater Las Vegas have likely lost way too much money and are letting this loss affect their driving. Third, perhaps the sun-in-the-eyes effect is stronger in the desert.

I’m proud of my ability to process (sometimes limited) information and figure stuff like this out. I expressed my reasoning to Bonnie and she was properly impressed.

Then I read the article.

It seemed Reno was number 6 on the list — as in, one of the safest cities in the country to drive. Like Las Vegas, Reno also has a lot of casinos. That shot down Reasons One and Two as to why Las Vegas has such lousy drivers. And Henderson (next door to Las Vegas) was ranked 59th in terms of driving safety. Henderson is just as much in the desert as is Las Vegas. That shot my third reason.

At that point, I was frustrated. Occasionally, my reasoning proves to be faulty, but I didn’t feel compelled to immediately share that information with Bonnie.

Although I may not have been correct this time, I suspect most of us are good at making up explanations as to why things happen. Sometimes we’re right. Sometimes we’re wrong. Most of us probably don’t keep a record of the times that we are incorrect and certainly many of us overestimate our analytical abilities.

This whole subject came to mind recently when I was reading a post on vpFREE. A player did a good deed (specifically, he returned an abandoned slot ticket to its rightful owner) and, shortly thereafter, he hit a royal flush. The poster concluded that it was karma and this confirmed for him that doing good deeds leads to good things happening in his life.

I’ve been warned about getting into this subject, but . . . the idea that good deeds leads to good results in your life is a core part of many religions. Many people take their religious beliefs very seriously (as they should) and try to apply those beliefs to all aspects of life. But if you wish to be a successful advantage player, you’re going to have to divorce yourself from such “good karma” thinking. It is fine to be religious, but concluding that since A came before B then that means that A CAUSED B is fatal to the type of thinking you need to practice in order to win at gambling.

Without going into my personal religious beliefs (and certainly not trying to convince you to change your religious beliefs), in general I believe that the more “good deeds” I do, the better my life works. The more people in my community who perform random acts of kindness, the better the quality of life is for all of us. I believe this, practice this, and am not interested in arguing with you about it.

But I absolutely do NOT believe that my video poker results have anything to do with whether or not I helped a little old lady across the street earlier in the day. If I DID believe that, every day before I gambled I might seek out little old ladies and help them across the street, (perhaps whether they wanted to go or not!).

None of us is an expert on everything, but that shouldn’t stop us from fully participating in life. For example, I have a limited knowledge about the internal workings of cars, but I can drive reasonably safely and know enough to keep gas in my car and have maintenance regularly performed by people who DO understand such things.

Most of my readers aren’t video poker experts, but many know enough to choose appropriate games and follow a strategy accurately developed by a trusted person or computer program. This works well enough for most people. But adding strategies based on things like, “On my last trip, I won in the afternoon but not in the evening, so in the future I’m not going to be playing at all after dinner,” is simply nonsense.

Learning from what happens to us is important. But a surprising number of people learn the wrong lessons. If you wish to succeed in life (and gambling), you’re going to have to understand the difference between the order of a series of events and what caused those events.

And just because a random order of events happens twice doesn’t confirm that there’s any causation involved.

Facebooktwitteryoutubeinstagram
Video Poker
Podcast – guest Mark Dace
Podcast – guest Mike Shackleford G2E edition

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Join LVAs Mailing List


Sign me up for:

GWAE Post Categories

  • Advantage Play (653)
    • Advanced Strategy (262)
    • Advice for Players (258)
    • Comps & Promos (75)
    • Game Protection (10)
  • Breaking News (8)
    • News Stories (3)
  • Casino Games (395)
    • Blackjack (31)
    • Craps (11)
    • Other Table Games (13)
    • Poker (33)
    • Slot Machines (5)
    • Video Poker (302)
  • Daily Fantasy Sports (2)
  • Gambling Glossary & Terminology (19)
  • Gambling Online (7)
  • General Thoughts/Opinion (78)
  • GWAE Podcast Episodes (643)
  • Non-Casino Games (3)
  • Reviews: Books, Movies, TV (29)
  • Sports betting (46)
  • Tournaments (2)

Recent Comments

  • coconut on What Would You Do?
  • KOAficionado on Colin Jones (S1 E9): Knockout KISS
  • A McGill on New Blackjack, Same Old Baloney
  • 바카라사이트 on The Cheating Game
  • Bajilive on “You’ve Already Hit the Royal”

Recent Posts

  • Business credit cards for profession gamblers and APs
  • Podcast – Sherriff AP episode 9
  • Spinach!
  • THE IMPORTANCE OF EVALUATING YOUR RESULTS IN BLACKJACK
  • Billy’s Book
Never miss another post

GWAE Bloggers

  • About Andy Uyal
  • About Anthony Curtis
  • About Bill Ordine
  • About Blair Rodman
  • About Bob Dancer
  • About FrankB
  • About Jack Andrews
  • About James Grosjean
  • About Nicholas Colon
  • About Richard Munchkin
  • Bloggers
  • Play Desert Diamond
  • Podcast – attorney Bob Nersesian 12/8/22
  • Podcast – Mickey Crimm 3/23/2023
  • SuperBlog
“Gambling With An Edge” is a unique cyber-hub where some of most-respected minds in professional gambling collectively share their expertise, advanced-strategy tips, insights, and opinions via the GWAE “SuperBlog” and weekly GWAE radio show.
The expertise to be found here spans the full spectrum of casino games, advantage-play techniques, and legal-wagering opportunities in the U.S., with contributors including James Grosjean (AP, table games), Bob Dancer (video poker), Richard Munchkin (AP, author), Blair Rodman (poker), Frank B. (sports betting), and others.

Other LVA Blogs

Frugal Vegas with Jean Scott
LVA Travel
Stiffs & Georges with David McKee
Vegas with an Edge
Powered by LasVegasAdvisor.com copyright 1983-2018 Huntington Press | All Rights Reserved | Privacy Policy